AI Article Synopsis

  • Social bonds in mammals can enhance fitness by mitigating physiological stress, particularly through the regulation of glucocorticoid hormones.
  • The study examines the relationship between allogrooming behavior and glucocorticoid levels in wild female chacma baboons, revealing that grooming may lead to temporary increases in stress hormone levels.
  • These findings challenge the assumption that social grooming always has positive health effects, indicating that maintaining social bonds might come with short-term physiological costs.

Article Abstract

Social bonds increase fitness in a range of mammals. One pathway by which social bonds may increase fitness is by reducing the exposure to physiological stress, i.e. glucocorticoid (GC) hormones, that can be detrimental to health and survival. This is achieved through downregulating hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA)-axis activity. Indeed, long-term measures of social (grooming) bonds are often negatively correlated with HPA-axis activity. However, the proximate role of physical touch through allogrooming remains an open question in the sociality-health-fitness debate. Demonstrating the potential anxiolytic benefits of grooming in the wild is hindered by methodological limitations. Here, we match accelerometer-identified grooming in wild female chacma baboons () to non-invasive faecal GC metabolite concentrations (fGCs). Consistent with previous work, we found a negative (but statistically non-significant) overall relationship between individual averaged fGCs and grooming rates. However, when time-matching grooming to fGCs, we found that both more giving and receiving grooming were followed by higher fGCs. This upregulation of HPA-axis activity suggests that maintaining social bonds (and its ultimate fitness benefits) may come at a shorter-term physiological cost. This finding sheds new light on a ubiquitous social behaviour typically considered 'relaxing' and suggests that sociopositive contact can trigger physiological stress.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11303038PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsbl.2024.0163DOI Listing

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