Grooming interactions benefit groomers, but may have negative consequences for bystanders. Grooming limits bystanders’ grooming access and ensuing alliances could threaten the bystander’s hierarchy rank or their previous investment in the groomers. To gain a competitive advantage, bystanders could intervene into a grooming bout to increase their own grooming access or to prevent the negative impact of others’ grooming. We test the impact of dominance rank and social relationships on grooming intervention likelihood and outcome in two sympatric primate species, Western chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes verus) and sooty mangabeys (Cercocebus atys atys). In both species, rather than increasing their own access to preferred partners, bystanders inte...
Understanding cooperation between unrelated individuals remains a central problem in animal behaviou...
Grooming is one of the most conspicuous social interactions among nonhuman primates. The selection o...
Living in permanent social groups forces animals to make decisions about when, how and with whom to ...
Grooming interactions benefit groomers, but may have negative consequences for bystanders. Grooming ...
Grooming interactions benefit groomers, but may have negative consequences for bystanders. Grooming ...
Living in permanent social groups forces animals to make decisions about when, how and with whom to ...
Understanding the evolution of cooperation remains a central concern in studies of animal behaviour,...
Social animals invest time and resources into adapting their social environment, which emerges not o...
Grooming might be a resource that is offered in exchange for some benefit (e.g. access to a feeding ...
Social grooming is ubiquitous among the captive chimpanzees at Chester Zoo. Seven individuals were c...
The evolution of cooperation remains a central issue in socio-biology with the fundamental problem o...
Grooming might be a resource that is offered in exchange for some benefit (e.g. access to a feeding ...
Grooming is one of the most conspicuous social interactions among nonhuman primates. The selection o...
Primates maintain social bonds with specific individuals in the group by directing grooming toward t...
Understanding cooperation between unrelated individuals remains a central problem in animal behaviou...
Grooming is one of the most conspicuous social interactions among nonhuman primates. The selection o...
Living in permanent social groups forces animals to make decisions about when, how and with whom to ...
Grooming interactions benefit groomers, but may have negative consequences for bystanders. Grooming ...
Grooming interactions benefit groomers, but may have negative consequences for bystanders. Grooming ...
Living in permanent social groups forces animals to make decisions about when, how and with whom to ...
Understanding the evolution of cooperation remains a central concern in studies of animal behaviour,...
Social animals invest time and resources into adapting their social environment, which emerges not o...
Grooming might be a resource that is offered in exchange for some benefit (e.g. access to a feeding ...
Social grooming is ubiquitous among the captive chimpanzees at Chester Zoo. Seven individuals were c...
The evolution of cooperation remains a central issue in socio-biology with the fundamental problem o...
Grooming might be a resource that is offered in exchange for some benefit (e.g. access to a feeding ...
Grooming is one of the most conspicuous social interactions among nonhuman primates. The selection o...
Primates maintain social bonds with specific individuals in the group by directing grooming toward t...
Understanding cooperation between unrelated individuals remains a central problem in animal behaviou...
Grooming is one of the most conspicuous social interactions among nonhuman primates. The selection o...
Living in permanent social groups forces animals to make decisions about when, how and with whom to ...