4.3 Article

Analysing the effects of group size and food competition on Japanese macaque social relationships

Journal

BEHAVIOUR
Volume 146, Issue -, Pages 113-137

Publisher

BRILL ACADEMIC PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1163/156853908X390959

Keywords

aggression; grooming; kinship; rank; reconciliation

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Socio-ecological models predict group size to be one major factor affecting the level of food competition. The aims of this study were to analyse how grooming distribution and reconciliation were affected by differences in group size and food competition in a habitat where predation risk is absent. Data were collected on two groups of different size of wild Japanese macaques ( Macaca fuscata yakui), living on Yakushima Island, Japan. The large group faced a greater level of intra-group scramble and a lower level of inter-group food competition. However, intra-group food competition appeared to be greater in the small group as evidenced by the stronger rank-related effects on diet composition in the small group. Grooming and reconciliation were more matrilineally kin-biased and more directed toward close-ranking monkeys in the small group than in the large group. Reconciliation was more frequent in the small group, but monkeys in the large group spent more time grooming and had a greater number of grooming partners. These results indicate that social relationships within the two groups were the result of the combination of group size differences and of the balance between the benefits and costs of a lower/greater level of inter-and intra-group food competition.

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