Abstract
Until now cooperation experiments in primates have paid little attention to how cooperation can emerge and what effects are produced on the structure of a social group in nature. I performed field experiments with three groups of wild vervet monkeys in South Africa. I induced individuals to repeatedly approach and operate food containers. At least two individuals needed to operate the containers in order to get the reward. The recurrent partner associations observed before the experiment only partly predicted the forming of cooperative partnerships during the experiment. While most of the tested subjects cooperated with other partners, they preferred to do so with specific combinations of individuals and they tended not to mix with other group members outside these preferred partnerships. Cooperation therefore caused the relatively homogeneous networks I observed before the experiment to differentiate. Similar to a matching market, the food sharing partners selected each other limiting their choice. Interestingly neither sex nor age classes explained the specific partner matching. Kinship could not explain it either. Rather, higher ranking individuals cooperated with other higher ranking individuals, and lower ranking also matched among the same rank. This study reveals the key role dominance rank plays when food resources are patchy and can only be accessed through sharing with other individuals.
Highlights
One of the key elements in evolution is the potential of individuals to act together in cooperation
The current study shed light on the modified social dynamics that arose in three wild primate groups when an experiment to elicit cooperation was set up in the field
The limited and patchy resources were offered to couples or multiple monkeys, side by side, operating a food releasing mechanism
Summary
One of the key elements in evolution is the potential of individuals to act together in cooperation. If cooperation with specific individuals does not produce a convenient outcome, partner switching should take place so to favour a search for the profitable combination of partners [7]. This perspective allows generalising further, because it takes into consideration the strategies accounted by multiple interacting individuals. A relatively complex case of cooperation is food sharing When it occurs, animals act together and make joint use of food resources that could in principle be used and monopolised by single individuals [13]. This study represents a first step in answering this question and provides the first results concerning cooperative problem solving in primates in the field with experimental manipulation
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