社会关系驱动蓝猴裂变后的群体选择。

IF 3.5
Proceedings. Biological sciences Pub Date : 2025-09-01 Epub Date: 2025-09-24 DOI:10.1098/rspb.2025.0376
Rory Wakeford, Marina Cords
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引用次数: 0

摘要

永久的群体分裂为具有社会爱心的个体选择群体伙伴提供了难得的机会。我们假设动物在裂变过程中优先考虑维持有益的社会关系。我们通过考虑社会关系的强度和一致性、优势关系和与雌性同伴的关系、杀婴风险和与原群体雄猴的联系来评估具有爱心的成年雌性蓝猴裂变后的群体选择。使用时间网络模型,我们评估了哪些雌性在裂变后仍然在一起(即保持联系)。雌性在裂变前更倾向于与那些一直有很强的亲缘关系的个体保持联系。血缘关系更密切的个体只有在杀婴风险相似的情况下才有可能维持这种关系。条件logit模型显示,有杀婴倾向的雌性更有可能加入有原种群常驻雄性的裂变后群体,而不是没有雄性的裂变后群体。总的来说,雌性蓝猴在构建裂变后的群体时,似乎会考虑多种类型的关系,优先考虑与其他雌性和熟悉的雄性的关系,甚至在幼崽脆弱时与亲属分离。裂变过程中优先考虑的关系可能会带来好处,而女性的选择说明了社会性如何影响决策。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Social ties drive post-fission group choice in blue monkeys.

Social ties drive post-fission group choice in blue monkeys.

Social ties drive post-fission group choice in blue monkeys.

Permanent group fissions present rare opportunities for socially philopatric individuals to select their groupmates. We hypothesized that animals prioritize maintaining beneficial social ties during fission. We assessed post-fission group choice in philopatric adult female blue monkeys by considering the strength and consistency of their social ties, dominance relations and relatedness with female peers, as well as their risk of infanticide and ties to the original group's resident male. Using a temporal network model, we assessed which females remained together (i.e. maintained ties) after fission. Females preferentially maintained ties to individuals with whom they had consistently strong affiliative ties before fission. More closely related individuals were likely to maintain ties only if they had similar risks of infanticide. Conditional logit models showed that females vulnerable to infanticide were more likely to join the post-fission group with the original group's resident male than the group without him. Overall, female blue monkeys appear to consider multiple types of relationships when structuring their post-fission groups, prioritizing consistent affiliative ties with other females and ties with a familiar male, and even separating from kin when infant offspring are vulnerable. The relationships prioritized during fission likely confer benefits, and females' choices illuminate how sociality influences decision-making.

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