4.6 Article

Sex-specific association patterns in bonobos and chimpanzees reflect species differences in cooperation

期刊

ROYAL SOCIETY OPEN SCIENCE
卷 4, 期 5, 页码 -

出版社

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsos.161081

关键词

sociality; sexual segregation; competition; kinship; Pan troglodytes; Pan paniscus

资金

  1. Leaky Foundation
  2. Wenner Gren Foundation
  3. National Geographic Society
  4. Basler Stiftung fuer Biologische Forschung
  5. SNF
  6. DFG
  7. DAAD
  8. Volkswagen Foundation
  9. Ludwig Maximilians Universitaet Muenchen
  10. Leakey Foundation
  11. Royal Zoological Society of Scotland
  12. European Research Council [PRILANG 283871]
  13. Max Planck Society

向作者/读者索取更多资源

In several group-living species, individuals' social preferences are thought to be influenced by cooperation. For some societies with fission-fusion dynamics, sex-specific association patterns reflect sex differences in cooperation in within-and between-group contexts. In our study, we investigated this hypothesis further by comparing sex-specific association patterns in two closely related species, chimpanzees and bonobos, which differ in the level of between-group competition and in the degree to which sex and kinship influence dyadic cooperation. Here, we used long-term party composition data collected on five chimpanzee and two bonobo communities and assessed, for each individual of 10 years and older, the sex of its top associate and of all conspecifics with whom it associated more frequently than expected by chance. We found clear species differences in association patterns. While in all chimpanzee communities males and females associated more with same-sex partners, in bonobos males and females tended to associate preferentially with females, but the female association preference for other females is lower than in chimpanzees. Our results also show that, for bonobos (but not for chimpanzees), association patterns were predominantly driven by mother-offspring relationships. These species differences in association patterns reflect the high levels of male-male cooperation in chimpanzees and of motherson cooperation in bonobos. Finally, female chimpanzees showed intense association with a few other females, and male chimpanzees showed more uniform association across males. In bonobos, the most differentiated associations were from males towards females. Chimpanzee male association patterns mirror fundamental human male social traits and, as in humans, may have evolved as a response to strong between-group competition. The lack of such a pattern in a closely related species with a lower degree of between-group competition further supports this notion.

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