Cofeeding tolerance in chimpanzees depends on group composition: a longitudinal study across four communities
DeTroy, Sarah E.; Ross, Cody T.; Cronin, Katherine A.; van Leeuwen, Edwin J.C.; Haun, Daniel B.M.
(2021) iScience, volume 24, issue 3, pp. 1 - 31
(Article)
Abstract
Social tolerance is generally treated as a stable, species-specific characteristic. Recent research, however, has questioned this position and emphasized the importance of intraspecific variation. We investigate the temporal stability of social tolerance in four groups of sanctuary-housed chimpanzees over eight years using a commonly employed measure: experimental cofeeding tolerance. We
... read more
then draw on longitudinal data on the demographic composition of each group to identify the factors associated with cofeeding tolerance. We find appreciable levels of variation in cofeeding tolerance across both groups and years that correspond closely to changes in group-level demographic composition. For example, cofeeding tolerance is lower when there are many females with young infants. These results suggest that social tolerance may be a “responding trait” of chimpanzee sociality, reflecting individual-level behavioral responses to social changes. Additional, experimental research is needed to better model the causal drivers of social tolerance within and among species.
show less
Download/Full Text
Keywords: Animals, Evolutionary Biology, Zoology, General
ISSN: 2589-0042
Publisher: Elsevier
Note: Funding Information: We wish to thank the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology and the University of Leipzig for funding this research. E.J.C.v.L. was additionally funded by the Research Foundation Flanders (FWO) - 12W5318N . We thank Innocent Mulenga (general manager) for facilitating the research; Thalita Calvi (on-site veterinarian) for her research-supporting efforts; the Zambian research team, including Patrick Chambatu, Thomson Mbilishi, Albert Mulembo, Goodson Muletele, Felix Chinyama, Patrick Mwika, Mumba Kawele, Misheck Kasongo, John Kayuya, Richard Kafunga, Rodgers Chilombo, Robert Sokontwe, Ndema Sakala, and Joseph Kasongo; Mark Bodamer and the Gonazaga University students for continued research support; all the peanut swingers, especially Anni Gläser, Clara Dubois, Manon Schweinfurth, and Bianca Dietrich; Dirk Diemer, Daniel DeTroy, and Sebastian Schütte for engineering advice; Amelie Conrad and Mackenzie Hewes for coding support; Anne Sibilsky, Maleen Thiele, Sarah Peoples, and Linda Schymanski for help with the graphical abstract; the Zambia Wildlife Authority; the Chimfunshi Board of Trustees; and the Chimfunshi Research Advisory Board. Publisher Copyright: © 2021 The Author(s)
(Peer reviewed)
See more statistics about this item