Female Affiliation and Status in Semi-Free-Ranging Chimpanzees

IF 2 2区 生物学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY
Margaret A. H. Bryer, Paige Barnes, Kris H. Sabbi, Skylar Brodnan, Charlie MacKenzie, Isabelle Monroe, Natalia Camargo Peña, Phillip Sekulya, Innocent Ampeire, Amos Okello, Stanley Kyama, Boris Waiga, Hillary Aligumisiriza, Joseph Masereka, Joseph Kaale, Titus Mukungu, Joshua Rukundo, Zarin P. Machanda, Alexandra G. Rosati
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Abstract

Objectives

Sex differences in social behavior and status are pervasive across primates and other mammals. In the wild, chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) exhibit many sex-typed behaviors: adult female chimpanzees exhibit lower aggression, are subordinate to adult males, and also are generally less social than males. This pattern is thought to partly reflect the energetic constraints (e.g., feeding competition) that wild female chimpanzees face.

Materials and Methods

We test the drivers of sex differences in chimpanzee behavior by examining a semi-free-ranging African chimpanzee sanctuary group where individuals are provisioned, an environment that should relax ecological constraints on socializing. Using two years of focal observations on a group with 45 chimpanzees (17 males, 28 females), we examined sex differences in social proximity, grooming, aggression, coalition formation, and dominance.

Results

In contrast to patterns in wild chimpanzees, we found that males and females in this population exhibited comparable rates of affiliative behavior. Males engaged in more aggressive behavior overall than females, as in the wild. However, females were equally likely to aggress either sex, and a high proportion of female aggression involved coalitions. Finally, David's scores revealed that a few of the adult females outranked some of the lower-status adult males.

Discussion

These findings show that sex differences in chimpanzee social behavior are partially flexible, and females may show more affiliation, cooperation, and higher status when ecological conditions are favorable. More generally, some forms of female power can emerge even in a species with strong sex biases in behavior for male affiliation and status.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

半自由放养的黑猩猩中雌性的从属关系和地位。
目的:社会行为和地位的性别差异在灵长类动物和其他哺乳动物中普遍存在。在野外,黑猩猩(泛穴居人)表现出许多性别类型的行为:成年雌性黑猩猩表现出较低的攻击性,服从于成年雄性,而且通常比雄性更不合群。这种模式被认为部分反映了野生雌性黑猩猩面临的能量限制(例如,喂养竞争)。材料和方法:我们通过研究一个半自由放养的非洲黑猩猩保护区来测试黑猩猩行为性别差异的驱动因素,该保护区为个体提供了一个放松社交生态限制的环境。我们对45只黑猩猩(17只雄性,28只雌性)进行了为期两年的重点观察,研究了社会接近度、梳理、攻击性、联盟形成和支配地位等方面的性别差异。结果:与野生黑猩猩的模式相反,我们发现雄性和雌性在这个种群中表现出相当的附属行为率。就像在野外一样,男性总体上比女性更具攻击性。然而,女性攻击任何一种性别的可能性都是一样的,而且女性攻击的很大一部分涉及联盟。最后,大卫的分数显示,一些成年女性的排名超过了一些地位较低的成年男性。讨论:这些发现表明,黑猩猩社会行为的性别差异在一定程度上是灵活的,当生态条件有利时,雌性可能表现出更多的隶属关系、合作关系和更高的地位。更普遍的是,某些形式的女性权力甚至可以出现在对男性从属关系和地位的行为有强烈性别偏见的物种中。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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