Primate social organization evolved from a flexible pair-living ancestor

Author:

Olivier Charlotte-Anaïs12ORCID,Martin Jordan S.3ORCID,Pilisi Camille1,Agnani Paul1,Kauffmann Cécile1,Hayes Loren4,Jaeggi Adrian V.3ORCID,Schradin C.12

Affiliation:

1. Institut Pluridisciplinaire Hubert Curien, CNRS, Department of Ethology and Evolutionary Physiology, University of Strasbourg, Strasbourg 67200, France

2. School of Animal, Plant and Environmental Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg 2050, South Africa

3. Human Ecology Group, Institute of Evolutionary Medicine, University of Zurich, Zurich CH-8057, Switzerland

4. Department of Biology, Geology, and Environmental Science, University of Tennessee, Chattanooga 37403, TN

Abstract

Explaining the evolution of primate social organization has been fundamental to understand human sociality and social evolution more broadly. It has often been suggested that the ancestor of all primates was solitary and that other forms of social organization evolved later, with transitions being driven by various life history traits and ecological factors. However, recent research showed that many understudied primate species previously assumed to be solitary actually live in pairs, and intraspecific variation in social organization is common. We built a detailed database from primary field studies quantifying the number of social units expressing different social organizations in each population. We used Bayesian phylogenetic models to infer the probability of each social organization, conditional on several socioecological and life history predictors. Here, we show that when intraspecific variation is accounted for, the ancestral social organization of primates was inferred to be variable, with the most common social organization being pair-living but with approximately 10 to 20% of social units of the ancestral population deviating from this pattern by being solitary living. Body size and activity patterns had large effects on transitions between types of social organizations. As in other mammalian clades, pair-living is closely linked to small body size and likely more common in ancestral species. Our results challenge the assumption that ancestral primates were solitary and that pair-living evolved afterward emphasizing the importance of focusing on field data and accounting for intraspecific variation, providing a flexible statistical framework for doing so.

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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