Kinship promotes affiliative behaviors in a monkey.

Curr Zool

Shaanxi Key Laboratory for Animal Conservation, and College of Life Sciences, Northwest University, Xi'an, China.

Published: August 2018

In social mammals, kinship is an important factor that often affects the interactions among individuals within groups. In primates that live in a multilevel society, kinship may affect affiliative patterns between individuals at different scales within the larger group. For this study, we use field observations and molecular methods to reveal the profiles of how kinship affects affiliative behaviors between individuals in a breeding band of wild golden snub-nosed monkeys (). We use a novel nonparametric test, the partition Mantel test, to measure independently the correlation between kinship and each of three affiliative behaviors. Our results show that more closely related females are more likely to groom each other. Average relatedness between adult females within the same one-male unit (OMU) is higher than that between adult females from different OMUs. We suggest that closely related females may reside in the same OMU in order to attain inclusive fitness benefits, and that kinship plays an important role in maintaining the social structure of this species.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6084570PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/cz/zox046DOI Listing

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