Forming strong, equitable, and enduring social bonds with a few individuals in a group carries adaptive benefits in terms of increased longevity, offspring survival and paternity success in birds and mammals, including humans. These recent insights generated a new interest in the factors creating variation in the strength of social relationships. Whether and how animals discriminate paternal kin from non-kin and bias their social behavior accordingly is being debated. This study explores the relative importance of dominance rank, age, maternal and paternal relatedness in shaping dyadic affiliative relationships in a group of 30 captive rhesus macaque females. The strength of social relationships, measured by the composite sociality index fr...
Macaque societies are typically characterized by despotic dominance styles and strong bonds between ...
Social bonds between group members affect individual fitness and wellbeing. While the impact of bond...
When mammalian social groups exceed their optimal size, they often tend to split. In view of the pot...
Kin selection promotes the evolution of social behavior that increases the survival and reproductive...
Forming strong social bonds can lead to higher reproductive success, increased longevity and/or incr...
Kin selection promotes the evolution of social behaviour that increases the survival and reproductiv...
When agonistic interventions are nepotistic, individuals are expected to side more often with kin bu...
The impact of maternal kinship on social behaviour has been studied in detail for many primate speci...
<div><p>Among mammals, individuals form strong social bonds preferentially with their kin. Differenc...
Kin selection does not entirely account for the choice of affiliative interactions among chimpanzees...
Group-living animals often maintain a few very close affiliative relationships – social bonds – that...
Abstract In most primate species, females remain in the natal group with kin while males disperse aw...
Mammals commonly avoid mating with maternal kin, probably as a result of selection for inbreeding av...
<p>P values for individual effects derived from Markov Chain Monte Carlo sampling (Baayen 2008). Mat...
<div><p>In social animals, kin relations strongly shape the social structure of a group. In female-b...
Macaque societies are typically characterized by despotic dominance styles and strong bonds between ...
Social bonds between group members affect individual fitness and wellbeing. While the impact of bond...
When mammalian social groups exceed their optimal size, they often tend to split. In view of the pot...
Kin selection promotes the evolution of social behavior that increases the survival and reproductive...
Forming strong social bonds can lead to higher reproductive success, increased longevity and/or incr...
Kin selection promotes the evolution of social behaviour that increases the survival and reproductiv...
When agonistic interventions are nepotistic, individuals are expected to side more often with kin bu...
The impact of maternal kinship on social behaviour has been studied in detail for many primate speci...
<div><p>Among mammals, individuals form strong social bonds preferentially with their kin. Differenc...
Kin selection does not entirely account for the choice of affiliative interactions among chimpanzees...
Group-living animals often maintain a few very close affiliative relationships – social bonds – that...
Abstract In most primate species, females remain in the natal group with kin while males disperse aw...
Mammals commonly avoid mating with maternal kin, probably as a result of selection for inbreeding av...
<p>P values for individual effects derived from Markov Chain Monte Carlo sampling (Baayen 2008). Mat...
<div><p>In social animals, kin relations strongly shape the social structure of a group. In female-b...
Macaque societies are typically characterized by despotic dominance styles and strong bonds between ...
Social bonds between group members affect individual fitness and wellbeing. While the impact of bond...
When mammalian social groups exceed their optimal size, they often tend to split. In view of the pot...