Contraception is increasingly used to control wild animal populations. However, as reproductive condition influences social interactions in primates, the absence of new offspring could influence the females’ social integration. We studied two groups of wild macaques (Macaca fascicularis) including females recently sterilized in the Ubud Monkey Forest, Indonesia. We used social network analysis to examine female grooming and proximity networks and investigated the role of infant presence on social centrality and group connectivity, while controlling for the fertility status (sterilized N = 14, intact N = 34). We compared the ego networks of females experiencing different nursing conditions (young infant (YI) vs. old infant (OI) vs. non-nursi...
To optimize costs and reproductive success, rhesus macaques in biomedical primate research facilitie...
To optimize costs and reproductive success, rhesus macaques in biomedical primate research facilitie...
In some nonhuman primates, infants function as a social tool that can bridge relationships among gro...
peer reviewedContraception is increasingly used to control wild animal populations. However, as repr...
Thriving urban primate populations often create conflicts with humans, calling for special managemen...
Most mammals live in social groups in which members form differentiated social relationships. Indivi...
The analysis of grooming networks is a powerful tool to examine individual social and sexual relatio...
In promiscuous primates, interactions between adult males and infants have rarely been investigated....
Sociality is widespread among group-living primates and is beneficial in many ways. Sociality amongs...
Immatures' social development may be fundamental to understanding important biological processes, su...
Animal social structure is influenced by multiple socioecological factors. Of these, the links betwe...
Birth season adult heterosexual nonkin relationships of 50 free-ranging female rhesus macaques ( Mac...
Most primates are intensely social and spend a large amount of time servicing social relationships. ...
International audienceIn a previous study, we demonstrated the importance of social interactions in ...
Infant handling – involving affiliative behavior from non-mothers to infants – is a phenomenon that ...
To optimize costs and reproductive success, rhesus macaques in biomedical primate research facilitie...
To optimize costs and reproductive success, rhesus macaques in biomedical primate research facilitie...
In some nonhuman primates, infants function as a social tool that can bridge relationships among gro...
peer reviewedContraception is increasingly used to control wild animal populations. However, as repr...
Thriving urban primate populations often create conflicts with humans, calling for special managemen...
Most mammals live in social groups in which members form differentiated social relationships. Indivi...
The analysis of grooming networks is a powerful tool to examine individual social and sexual relatio...
In promiscuous primates, interactions between adult males and infants have rarely been investigated....
Sociality is widespread among group-living primates and is beneficial in many ways. Sociality amongs...
Immatures' social development may be fundamental to understanding important biological processes, su...
Animal social structure is influenced by multiple socioecological factors. Of these, the links betwe...
Birth season adult heterosexual nonkin relationships of 50 free-ranging female rhesus macaques ( Mac...
Most primates are intensely social and spend a large amount of time servicing social relationships. ...
International audienceIn a previous study, we demonstrated the importance of social interactions in ...
Infant handling – involving affiliative behavior from non-mothers to infants – is a phenomenon that ...
To optimize costs and reproductive success, rhesus macaques in biomedical primate research facilitie...
To optimize costs and reproductive success, rhesus macaques in biomedical primate research facilitie...
In some nonhuman primates, infants function as a social tool that can bridge relationships among gro...