首页> 外文期刊>Folia Primatologica: International Journal of Primatology: = Internationale Zeitschrift fur Primatologie: = Journal International de Primatologie >Investigating the Function of Mutual Grooming in Captive Bonobos (Pan paniscus) and Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes)
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Investigating the Function of Mutual Grooming in Captive Bonobos (Pan paniscus) and Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes)

机译:调查相互修饰的俘虏Bonobos(PAN PANISCUS)和黑猩猩(PAN Troglodytes)的功能

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摘要

Social grooming is often exchanged between individuals in many primate species. Rates of bidirectional (or simultaneous mutual) grooming vary across primate species, and its function is not yet fully understood. For example, mutual grooming is frequent in chimpanzees but rare in most primate species including wild bonobos. There are, however, no quantitative data available in captive bonobos. Therefore, through the direct comparison between captive bonobos and chimpanzees, this study aimed to (i) compare the frequency of mutual grooming betweenPanspecies, (ii) explore and compare the function of mutual grooming, and (iii) discuss the rarity of this behavior in wild bonobo populations. We tested three hypotheses following the previous literature in wild chimpanzees. The social bonding hypothesis states that mutual grooming facilitates the maintenance of strong dyadic bonds. The immediate investment hypothesis states that it serves to signal willingness to invest in the interaction. The switching hypothesis states that mutual grooming serves no function but only occurs as an overlap to change the direction of unidirectional grooming. Our findings strongly supported the immediate investment hypothesis, but not the others. Grooming bouts that included mutual grooming were longer and more equitable than bouts without, illustrating that captivePanspecies use mutual grooming to maximize their short-term benefits and increase the social value of their interaction. Captive bonobos performed mutual grooming in similar proportions and for similar functions as captive and wild chimpanzees do. This contrasts with wild bonobos who engage in this behavior only rarely. We suggest that the differences in patterns of mutual grooming between captive and wild bonobos might be explained by different degrees of kinship or by a potential intraspecies variation.
机译:社交美容通常在许多灵长类动物种类的个人之间交换。双向(或同时互联)美容率在灵长类动物中各不相同,其功能尚未完全理解。例如,相互修饰频繁在黑猩猩中频繁,但在包括野生Bonobos的大多数灵长类动物种类中罕见。但是,俘虏Bonobos没有提供定量数据。因此,通过俘虏Bonobos和黑猩猩之间的直接比较,这项研究旨在(i)比较相互修饰之间的频率,(ii)探索和比较相互梳理的功能,(iii)讨论这种行为的罕见性野生·博博人群。在野生黑猩猩之前,我们在以前的文献之后测试了三个假设。社会粘合假设指出,相互修饰有助于维持强大的二元键。直接投资假设表示,它有助于向投资互动的愿意发出意愿。交换假设状态,相互修饰没有任何功能,但仅发生作为改变单向修饰方向的重叠。我们的调查结果强烈支持直接投资假设,但不是其他的。包括相互美容的美容伴侣比Bouts更长,更公平地没有,说明CaptivePanspecies使用相互梳理来最大限度地提高他们的短期好处,并提高他们互动的社会价值。俘虏的Bonobos在类似的比例中进行了相互修饰,以及与俘虏和野生黑猩猩的类似功能。这与野生博博可以很少参与这种行为。我们建议,俘虏和野生黑黑波黑之间的相互修饰模式的差异可能是不同程度的亲属关系或潜在的内部变化来解释。

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