{"title":"Changes in Grooming Networks Among Male Chimpanzees Preceding a Permanent Community Fission at Ngogo","authors":"David P. Watts","doi":"10.1002/ajp.70074","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div>\n \n <p>Chimpanzees form social communities with memberships that change only with births, deaths, and female emigrations or immigrations and that are characterized by high fission-fusion dynamics. Relations between neighboring communities are intensely hostile, and males in the same community cooperate in potentially lethal intercommunity aggression. Permanent community fissions sometimes occur, but genetic data indicate that these are rare, and only a single case, from Gombe, had been known until recently. The unusually large Ngogo chimpanzee community in Kibale National Park, Uganda, observed continuously since 1995, underwent a gradual permanent fission during the 2010s that culminated in the inception of lethal intercommunity aggression in 2018. Males at Ngogo could be assigned to different socio-spatial neighborhoods based on association data before the permanent fission, but data on characteristics of grooming networks show that all belonged to a single community until around 2011. Subsequently, grooming networks showed clear differentiation between what became the Ngogo Central and Ngogo West communities. This preceded the first obvious behavioral signs of permanent fission. In principle, a model developed by Sueur et al. (2011; cf. Sueur and Maire 2014) to explain how increases in group size in papionin primates could lead to fracturing of female grooming networks and facilitate permanent fissions should apply to male chimpanzees, given the importance of male-male grooming for maintaining social bonds and cooperation in intergroup aggression. However, analysis of long-term data on male-male grooming indicates that increases in the number of females at Ngogo and variation in their residence decisions apparently had a greater effect on the dissolution of a community-wide male grooming network than did increases in the number of males. These results support the hypothesis that the main drover of the permanent fission was male reproductive competition, not constraints on the ability of males to maintain grooming networks.</p></div>","PeriodicalId":7662,"journal":{"name":"American Journal of Primatology","volume":"87 10","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":1.8000,"publicationDate":"2025-09-26","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"American Journal of Primatology","FirstCategoryId":"99","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ajp.70074","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"生物学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"ZOOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Chimpanzees form social communities with memberships that change only with births, deaths, and female emigrations or immigrations and that are characterized by high fission-fusion dynamics. Relations between neighboring communities are intensely hostile, and males in the same community cooperate in potentially lethal intercommunity aggression. Permanent community fissions sometimes occur, but genetic data indicate that these are rare, and only a single case, from Gombe, had been known until recently. The unusually large Ngogo chimpanzee community in Kibale National Park, Uganda, observed continuously since 1995, underwent a gradual permanent fission during the 2010s that culminated in the inception of lethal intercommunity aggression in 2018. Males at Ngogo could be assigned to different socio-spatial neighborhoods based on association data before the permanent fission, but data on characteristics of grooming networks show that all belonged to a single community until around 2011. Subsequently, grooming networks showed clear differentiation between what became the Ngogo Central and Ngogo West communities. This preceded the first obvious behavioral signs of permanent fission. In principle, a model developed by Sueur et al. (2011; cf. Sueur and Maire 2014) to explain how increases in group size in papionin primates could lead to fracturing of female grooming networks and facilitate permanent fissions should apply to male chimpanzees, given the importance of male-male grooming for maintaining social bonds and cooperation in intergroup aggression. However, analysis of long-term data on male-male grooming indicates that increases in the number of females at Ngogo and variation in their residence decisions apparently had a greater effect on the dissolution of a community-wide male grooming network than did increases in the number of males. These results support the hypothesis that the main drover of the permanent fission was male reproductive competition, not constraints on the ability of males to maintain grooming networks.
黑猩猩形成的社会群体,其成员只会随着出生、死亡、雌性迁出或迁入而变化,其特征是高度的裂变-融合动力学。邻近社区之间的关系非常敌对,同一社区中的雄性在潜在的致命的社区间攻击中合作。永久的群落分裂有时会发生,但遗传数据表明这种情况很少见,直到最近才知道贡贝的一个病例。乌干达基巴莱国家公园(Kibale National Park)异常庞大的Ngogo黑猩猩群落自1995年以来一直被观察到,在2010年代经历了一次逐渐的永久性裂变,最终在2018年开始了致命的群落间侵略。根据永久裂变之前的关联数据,Ngogo的雄性可以被分配到不同的社会空间社区,但关于梳理网络特征的数据显示,直到2011年左右,所有雄性都属于一个社区。随后,梳理网络在Ngogo中部和Ngogo西部社区之间显示出明显的差异。这先于永久裂变的第一个明显的行为迹象。原则上,Sueur等人(2011;cf. Sueur和Maire 2014)开发的一个模型解释了灵长类动物群体规模的增加如何导致雌性梳理网络的破裂并促进永久分裂,该模型适用于雄性黑猩猩,因为雄性雄性梳理对于维持群体间攻击中的社会纽带和合作至关重要。然而,对男性-男性梳理的长期数据分析表明,Ngogo女性数量的增加和她们居住决定的变化显然比男性数量的增加对整个社区男性梳理网络的解体有更大的影响。这些结果支持了一个假设,即永久性裂变的主要驱动力是雄性生殖竞争,而不是雄性维持梳理网络的能力受到限制。
期刊介绍:
The objective of the American Journal of Primatology is to provide a forum for the exchange of ideas and findings among primatologists and to convey our increasing understanding of this order of animals to specialists and interested readers alike.
Primatology is an unusual science in that its practitioners work in a wide variety of departments and institutions, live in countries throughout the world, and carry out a vast range of research procedures. Whether we are anthropologists, psychologists, biologists, or medical researchers, whether we live in Japan, Kenya, Brazil, or the United States, whether we conduct naturalistic observations in the field or experiments in the lab, we are united in our goal of better understanding primates. Our studies of nonhuman primates are of interest to scientists in many other disciplines ranging from entomology to sociology.