Role of immigrant males and muzzle contacts in the uptake of a novel food by wild vervet monkeys

Author:

Dongre Pooja12ORCID,Lanté Gaëlle13,Cantat Mathieu2,Canteloup Charlotte124ORCID,van de Waal Erica12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecology and Evolution, University of Lausanne

2. Inkawu Vervet Project, Mawana Game Reserve

3. University of Poitiers

4. Laboratory of Cognitive & Adaptive Neurosciences, CNRS - UMR 7364, University of Strasbourg

Abstract

The entry into and uptake of information in social groups is critical for behavioral adaptation by long-lived species in rapidly changing environments. We exposed five groups of wild vervet monkeys to a novel food to investigate the innovation of processing and consuming it. We report that immigrant males innovated in two groups, and an infant innovated in one group. In two other groups, immigrant males imported the innovation from their previous groups. We compared uptake between groups with respect to the initial innovator to examine the extent to which dispersing males could introduce an innovation into groups. Uptake of the novel food was faster in groups where immigrant males ate first rather than the infants. Younger individuals were more likely overall, and faster, to subsequently acquire the novel food. We also investigated the role of muzzle contact behavior in information seeking around the novel food. Muzzle contacts decreased in frequency over repeated exposures to the novel food. Muzzle contacts were initiated the most by naïve individuals, high rankers, and juveniles; and were targeted most towards knowledgeable individuals and high rankers, and the least towards infants. We highlight the potential importance of dispersers in rapidly exploiting novel resources among populations.

Funder

Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung

Branco Weiss Fellowship – Society in Science

Fondation Fyssen

Fondation des Treilles

Horizon 2020

Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

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