Abstract

Social grooming is a commonly observed affiliative behaviour in primates. Grooming has been suggested to represent a service in a biological marketplace, exchanged either for grooming or for other social commodities or services. Accordingly, grooming is predicted to be approximately reciprocated within a dyad when no other services are being exchanged, but it should be more asymmetrical if partners have different quantities of other services to offer. We analysed 412 grooming bouts observed in four groups of free-ranging redfronted lemurs to test this prediction. Grooming in this species seems to take place in a highly reciprocal manner because partners usually alternate in the roles of groomer and gromee within a grooming bout. However, within dyads there were asymmetries in the duration of grooming given and received. In both sexes, more grooming was directed from low-ranking towards high-ranking individuals than vice versa, and in males this asymmetry became more pronounced as the number of subordinates per group increased. Grooming in bisexual dyads was generally skewed in favour of males, but patterns of grooming between the sexes were less clear than within the sexes. In addition, aggression occurred at high frequencies between classes of individuals that were characterized by nonreciprocal grooming, suggesting that grooming may serve as a means to reduce aggression in dyads with a high potential for conflicts. Taken together, our results indicate that a strict reciprocation of grooming can be offset by power differentials between partners, where grooming appears to be traded by subordinates in exchange for the tolerance of dominants.

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