1997
DOI: 10.1006/anbe.1996.0419
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Grooming down the hierarchy: allogrooming in captive brown capuchin monkeys,Cebus apella

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Cited by 85 publications
(65 citation statements)
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“…The high-ranking females received grooming from all ranks, whereas the middle-and lowranking females largely received their grooming from the low-ranking females. The view that more grooming occurs between closely ranked dyads than between distant dyads (Parr et al 1997) was true in the case of the high-ranking and the middle-ranking lion-tailed macaque females where the low-ranking females largely groomed distant ranks. The view that grooming is reciprocal in macaques (de Waal and Luttrell 1986;de Waal 1991) was true only for high-ranking females as the middle-and the low-ranking females were observed to groom more unidirectionally than reciprocally.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The high-ranking females received grooming from all ranks, whereas the middle-and lowranking females largely received their grooming from the low-ranking females. The view that more grooming occurs between closely ranked dyads than between distant dyads (Parr et al 1997) was true in the case of the high-ranking and the middle-ranking lion-tailed macaque females where the low-ranking females largely groomed distant ranks. The view that grooming is reciprocal in macaques (de Waal and Luttrell 1986;de Waal 1991) was true only for high-ranking females as the middle-and the low-ranking females were observed to groom more unidirectionally than reciprocally.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In some species of New World monkeys (e.g. Cebus apella), more grooming is directed down the hierarchy (Parr et al 1997). Hemelrijk (2004) included the concept of spatial centrality, i.e.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The extent of reciprocity within dyads seems to vary across species. In macaques and vervets grooming is typically directed up the hierarchy (Fairbanks, 1980;Seyfarth, 1980;Silk, 1982;Chapais, 1983), but in female-bonded wedge-capped capuchins grooming is directed down the hierarchy (O'Brien, 1993;Parr et al, 1997), and in whitefaced capuchins grooming is evenly balanced within the majority of dyads (Manson et al, 1999). Among free-ranging baboons, the pattern is equally variable.…”
Section: Patterningmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Di Bitetti (1997) verificou que os pares de indivíduos que realizam catação com maior frequência são os mesmos que formam alianças mais fortes. Alguns estudos realizados com Cebus capucinus relataram que as fêmeas dominantes recebem a maior parte das catações (Perry et al, 2017, Rose, 1998 catações com maior frequência nas fêmeas subordinadas do que o inverso (Parr et al, 1997).…”
Section: Vida Socialunclassified