Abstract

Observations of dominance relations in a large group of rhesus monkeys on Cayo Santiago were carried out over a period of 25 months. Dyadic interactions in which an aggressive gesture in one individual was followed by a submissive gesture in the other were recorded as ‘fights’ and considered reliable indices of dominance. The analysis revealed the following characteristics: (1) Maternal dominance over female offspring; (2) maternal dominance over male offspring up the age six years at which time the son leaves his natal group or remains in the group and rises in rank over his mother; (3) dominance of older brothers over younger male siblings until the age of five years at which time the younger brother rises in rank; (4) rank reversal between sisters when the younger sister reaches the age of three to four years; (5) brother-sister relative rank dependency on age until the male sibling reaches three to four years at which time he rises in rank; (6) linear dominance relations in the crossgenealogical dominance hierarchy; and (7) linear, but unstable, dominance relations in the adult male hierarchy. With few exceptions, the pattern of genealogical, cross-genealogical, and adult male dominance relations in the group under study was consistent with data reported for a small social group (group F) on Cayo Santiago and for Japanese macaques.

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