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The influence of phylogeny, social style, and sociodemographic factors on macaque social network structure. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the social structure of female macaques, focusing on dominance and grooming patterns, to understand how evolutionary relationships influence these behaviors.
  • Researchers analyzed 34-38 datasets from 10 macaque species to assess the strength of phylogenetic signals in dominance and grooming traits, finding that dominance traits had moderate-strong phylogenetic signals while grooming traits showed moderate-weak signals.
  • The findings suggest that larger macaque groups tend to have more modular social networks, indicating that group size and living conditions affect these social structures, with dominance networks showing greater evolutionary consistency than grooming networks.

Article Abstract

Among nonhuman primates, the evolutionary underpinnings of variation in social structure remain debated, with both ancestral relationships and adaptation to current conditions hypothesized to play determining roles. Here we assess whether interspecific variation in higher-order aspects of female macaque (genus: Macaca) dominance and grooming social structure show phylogenetic signals, that is, greater similarity among more closely-related species. We use a social network approach to describe higher-order characteristics of social structure, based on both direct interactions and secondary pathways that connect group members. We also ask whether network traits covary with each other, with species-typical social style grades, and/or with sociodemographic characteristics, specifically group size, sex-ratio, and current living condition (captive vs. free-living). We assembled 34-38 datasets of female-female dyadic aggression and allogrooming among captive and free-living macaques representing 10 species. We calculated dominance (transitivity, certainty), and grooming (centrality coefficient, Newman's modularity, clustering coefficient) network traits as aspects of social structure. Computations of K statistics and randomization tests on multiple phylogenies revealed moderate-strong phylogenetic signals in dominance traits, but moderate-weak signals in grooming traits. GLMMs showed that grooming traits did not covary with dominance traits and/or social style grade. Rather, modularity and clustering coefficient, but not centrality coefficient, were strongly predicted by group size and current living condition. Specifically, larger groups showed more modular networks with sparsely-connected clusters than smaller groups. Further, this effect was independent of variation in living condition, and/or sampling effort. In summary, our results reveal that female dominance networks were more phylogenetically conserved across macaque species than grooming networks, which were more labile to sociodemographic factors. Such findings narrow down the processes that influence interspecific variation in two core aspects of macaque social structure. Future directions should include using phylogeographic approaches, and addressing challenges in examining the effects of socioecological factors on primate social structure.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ajp.22727DOI Listing

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