Abstract

In-group cohesion is an essential component of successful intergroup competition in both human and nonhuman animals, likely facilitating group members access to potential benefits. However, when benefits are equally shared among group members, group defense becomes a collective action problem, which might subvert cohesive participation during intergroup competition. There is a lack of consensus across studies and species with regard to the link between in-group cohesion and intergroup competition, likely as a result of species differences in managing the collective action problem. Here, we examine this link in a species with a striking example of collective action during intergroup competition, chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes verus). Using two years of focal-follow data on males and females in two groups at the Taï Forest, Côte d’Ivoire, we investigated the immediate and long-term effects of intergroup competition (border patrols and intergroup encounters) on measures of in-group cohesion, namely modularity, party size, and intergroup aggression. We found that groups’ association patterns were less modular (more cohesive) in months in which they engaged in more border patrols and intergroup encounters. We found that current and greater prior engagement in intergroup competition predicted larger party sizes. Furthermore, current, but not prior engagement in intergroup competition, predicted reduced intragroup aggression by males but not by females. Increased in-group cohesion in chimpanzees likely reduces potential costs of intergroup competition engagement, by facilitating joint participation in current and future intergroup conflicts, overcoming the collective action problem.

Highlights

  • Intergroup competition, or hostility between different social groups, is apparent across human societies (Bowles 2009) and regularly observed in many group-living primate and nonprimate species (Crofoot and Wrangham 2010; Kitchen and Beehner 2007; Radford 2008; Rusch and Gavrilets 2017; Wilson et al 2014)

  • Our results provide evidence that link territorial activity and dynamics of in-group cohesion in a species with predominantly hostile intergroup interactions

  • We found that territorial activity influences group modularity, association patterns, and intragroup aggression in two distinct social groups of chimpanzees

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Summary

Introduction

Intergroup competition, or hostility between different social groups, is apparent across human societies (Bowles 2009) and regularly observed in many group-living primate and nonprimate species (Crofoot and Wrangham 2010; Kitchen and Beehner 2007; Radford 2008; Rusch and Gavrilets 2017; Wilson et al 2014). Intergroup competition may incur high costs, increasing an individual’s likelihood of injury or death, or generally affecting group members via potential loss of access to resources through the loss of group territory (Mitani et al 2010). The benefits of successful intergroup encounters are likewise substantial, potentially influencing access to resources and thereby the fitness of a group and its members (Mitani et al 2010; Radford and Fawcett 2014). In territorial species with intergroup contest competition, collective group defense is crucial for maintaining a territory and for group members to access resources associated with territories. Whether intergroup competition may enhance in-group cohesion and cooperation in other territorial social species remains unclear

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