4.3 Article

The consistency of individual centrality across time and networks in wild vervet monkeys

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PRIMATOLOGY
Volume 83, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ajp.23232

Keywords

aggression; grooming; network consistency; play; primate

Categories

Funding

  1. Branco Weiss Fellowship-Society in Science
  2. Fondation Fyssen
  3. Swiss National Science Foundation [31003A_159587, PP00P3_170624]
  4. Fondation des Treilles
  5. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [31003A_159587, PP00P3_170624] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)

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Individuals in the same group tend to maintain consistent network positions over time, but their network centralities do not correlate across different networks, except for Strength and weighted Eigenvector centrality between grooming and aggression networks. High-ranking individuals in the aggression network show the highest centrality in most network metrics, while females were most central in 2017 compared to males but not in 2018. The findings suggest that individuals' network centralities may vary among networks and over time, emphasizing the impact of sociodemographics and behavior functions on group-level dynamics of social behavior.
Previous primate social network studies largely limited their focus to grooming and/or aggression networks, particularly among adult females. In addition, the consistency of individuals' network centrality across time and/or different networks has received little attention, despite this being critical for a global understanding of dynamic social structure. Here, we analyzed the grooming, aggression, and play social networks of a group of 26-28 wild vervet monkeys (Chlorocebus pygerythrus), including adults and juveniles, over two periods of 6 months. We collected data on grooming, play, and aggression using focal animal sampling with instantaneous recording and ad libitum sampling. We examined whether individuals' network centralities were consistent over the two periods and across networks, as well as the effect of age, sex, and dominance rank on three individual centrality metrics in each network and within each study period. We found that individuals were quite consistent in their network position from 1 year to the next despite changes in group composition. However, their network centralities were not correlated across networks, except for Strength and weighted Eigenvector centrality between grooming and aggression networks. We also found that in the aggression network, high-rankers showed the highest centrality in most network metrics (e.g., Degree, Strength, and Eigenvector centrality) and compared to males, females were most central in 2017 but not in 2018. In the grooming network, high-ranking females had the highest Eigenvector centrality, whereas in the play network, juvenile males had the highest Eigenvector centrality. Our findings corroborate previous findings on vervet monkeys. In addition, they show that individuals' network centralities may vary among networks and over time; thus highlighting the effect of sociodemographics and behaviors' functions on the group level dynamics of social behavior.

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