Male Barbary macaques choose loyal coalition partners which may increase their coalition network betweenness

Author:

Schülke Oliver123ORCID,Rathke Eva‐Maria1,Berghänel Andreas4,Ostner Julia123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Behavioral Ecology J.‐F. Blumenbach Institute for Zoology and Anthropology, Georg‐August University Goettingen Göttingen Germany

2. Research Group Primate Social Evolution, German Primate Center Leibniz Institute for Primate Research Göttingen Germany

3. Leibniz Science Campus Primate Cognition, German Primate Centre Leibniz Institute for Primate Research (DPZ) and University of Goettingen Göttingen Germany

4. Domestication Lab, Konrad Lorenz Institute of Ethology, Department of Interdisciplinary Life Sciences University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna Vienna Austria

Abstract

AbstractReciprocity in the form of contingent exchanges of goods and services is widespread across animals. While there is ample evidence for helping to be contingent upon the help received from a partner, less attention has been paid to partner avoidance based on harm inflicted by a partner. Here, we investigated whether partner choice for agonistic support against powerful targets is guided by loyalty received, i.e., the tendency to refrain from attacking the subject in a coalition with any third partner. We further assessed whether loyalty received by all cooperation partners may generate increased levels of betweenness in the coalition network of a group, a measure of indirect connectedness that has previously been associated with fitness benefits. Based on observational data from male coalitions against male group mates in Barbary macaques (Macaca sylvanus), loyalty received was found to predict the frequency of cooperation in coalitions and the loyalty given to a partner. We propose that loyalty‐guided reciprocity will be favored in species with rank‐changing coalitions where defection is particularly risky. The more loyal a male's cooperation partners were, the more central he was in the coalition network in terms of higher in betweenness, suggesting a cognitively simple strategy underlying complex network positioning. Analyses of simulated data suggest strong correlations of loyalty and betweenness to be more prevalent in the relatively small groups characteristic of many primate species.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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