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Kinship and Social Bonds in Female Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes)

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PRIMATOLOGY
Volume 71, Issue 10, Pages 840-851

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ajp.20711

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Uganda Wildlife Authority
  2. Uganda National Council of Science and Technology
  3. US National Science Foundation [BCS-0215622, 1013-0516644, BCS-041, 6125]
  4. the National Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  5. the L. S. B. Leakey Foundation
  6. the Wenner-Gren Foundation
  7. the Max Planck Society
  8. the University of Michigan
  9. the Detroit Zoological Institute
  10. Alexander von Humboldt Foundation
  11. L. S. B. Leakey Foundation to R.Wrangham
  12. University of Michigan Committee on the Use and Care of Animals and the legal requirements of Uganda

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A large body of theoretical and empirical research suggests that kinship influences the development and maintenance of social bonds among group-living female mammals, and that human females may be unusual in the extent to which individuals form differentiated social relationships with nonrelatives. Here we combine behavioral observations of party association, spatial proximity, grooming, and space use with extensive molecular genetic analyses to determine whether female chimpanzees form strong social bonds with unrelated individuals of the same sex. We compare our results with those obtained from male chimpanzees who live in the same community and have been shown to form strong social bonds with each other. We demonstrate that party association is as good a predictor of spatial proximity and grooming in females as it is in males, that the highest party association indices are consistently found between female dyads, that the sexes do not differ in the long-term stability of their party association patterns, and that these results cannot be explained as a by-product of the tendency of females to selectively range in particular areas of the territory. We also show that close kin (i.e. mother-daughter and sibling dyads) are very rare, indicating that the vast majority of female dyads that form strong social bonds are not closely related. Additional analyses reveal that subgroups of females, consisting of individuals who frequently associate with one another in similar areas of the territory, do not consist of relatives. This suggests that a passive form of kin-biased dispersal, involving the differential migration of females from neighboring communities into subgroups, was also unlikely to be occurring. These results show that, as in males, kinship plays a limited role in structuring the intrasexual social relationships of female chimpanzees. Am. J. Primatol. 71:840-851, 2009. (C) 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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