2013
DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2012.0351
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Scalar social dynamics in female vervet monkey cohorts

Abstract: Primate social life and behaviour is contingent on a number of levels: phylogenetic, functional and proximate. Although this contingency is recognized by socioecological theory, variability in behaviour is still commonly viewed as ‘noise’ around a central tendency, rather than as a source of information. An alternative view is that selection has acted on social reaction norms that encompass demographic variation both between and within populations and demes. Here, using data from vervet monkeys ( C… Show more

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Cited by 61 publications
(30 citation statements)
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References 41 publications
(86 reference statements)
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“…47,116,118,122 This study also lends support to the concept of variability selection, in which behavioral adaptations to environmental variability may reflect more generalist than specialist strategies that may result in some degree of mismatch between ecology and behavior in the short term, but lead to long term adaptive flexibility. 123,124 Gorillas live in a wide range of ecological conditions (…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…47,116,118,122 This study also lends support to the concept of variability selection, in which behavioral adaptations to environmental variability may reflect more generalist than specialist strategies that may result in some degree of mismatch between ecology and behavior in the short term, but lead to long term adaptive flexibility. 123,124 Gorillas live in a wide range of ecological conditions (…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus far, intraspecific variation in social tolerance has been examined only rarely [Brosnan, 2006;Melis et al, 2006;Cronin et al, 2014]. However, the flexibility of primate social dynamics is becoming increasingly apparent, with social groups of the same species showing variation in mating systems, social spacing and hierarchical structure [Sapolsky, 2006;Henzi et al, 2013;Kappeler et al, 2013;Schradin, 2013]. Previous work on captive bonobo groups also warns against generalizations from data stemming from a single captive group, as groups were found to differ in expression of dominance relationships and social bonding [Stevens et al, 2008].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Using a long-term dataset, Blumstein [142] demonstrates that demographic dynamics impact several aspects of social organization and social structure in marmots. Henzi et al [152] use detailed comparisons of female social behaviour between two populations of vervet monkeys with different group sizes to test the possibility that selection has acted on social reaction norms that encompass demographic variation both between and within populations. Cantor & Whitehead [153] analyse patterns of group-specific social behaviour transmitted by social learning among whales and dolphins to test the proposition that culture and social structure mutually affect each other.…”
Section: (D) Social Constraintsmentioning
confidence: 99%