Abstract

Yawn contagion occurs when individuals yawn in response to the yawn of others (triggers). This is the first account of yawn contagion in wild geladas (Theropithecus gelada), a monkey species that shows yawn contagion in captivity and is organized in core units (one-male/bachelor groups) forming multilevel associations. In a population of geladas from the Kundi plateau (Ethiopia) we found that the yawning response was highest when geladas could perceive a triggering yawn, which confirms that yawn contagion is present in the wild. Yawn duration, mouth-opening degree and presence/absence of vocalisation (possibly modulating yawn detectability) did not affect the likelihood of contagion. Males and females, known to be both implicated in movement initiation within groups, were similarly powerful as yawn triggers. Instead, group membership and responder sex had a significant role in shaping the phenomenon. Yawn contagion was highest between individuals belonging to different core units and males were most likely to respond to others’ yawns. Because males have a non-negligible role in inter-group coordination, our results suggest that yawn contagion may have a communicative function that goes beyond the basic unit level.

Highlights

  • Yawn contagion occurs when individuals yawn in response to the yawn of others

  • Geladas (Theropithecus gelada) are a diurnal monkey species, endemic to Ethiopia, that lives in core units (One-Male-Unit, OMU; All-Male-Unit, AMU) forming discrete multilevel associations

  • Via Generalized Linear Mixed Model (GLMM), we found a significant difference between the full- and the null-model (χ2 = 34.0285, df = 10, p < 0.001)

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Summary

Introduction

Yawn contagion occurs when individuals yawn in response to the yawn of others (triggers) This is the first account of yawn contagion in wild geladas (Theropithecus gelada), a monkey species that shows yawn contagion in captivity and is organized in core units (one-male/bachelor groups) forming multilevel associations. Yawn contagion was highest between individuals belonging to different core units and males were most likely to respond to others’ yawns. While spontaneous yawning is probably an ancient phenomenon widespread in ­vertebrates[3,4], intraspecific contagious yawning is an evolutionary more recent phenomenon that has been found mostly in highly social species. In captive geladas yawn contagion was elicited by all types of yawns (covered teeth, uncovered teeth and uncovered gums) emitted with or without vocalizations It was highest between subjects sharing strong bonds (measured via grooming exchange rates)[35].

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