Abstract

Consolation, i.e., post-conflict affiliation directed from bystanders to recent victims of aggression, has recently acquired an important role in the debate about empathy in great apes. Although similar contacts have been also described for aggressors, i.e., appeasement, they have received far less attention and their function and underlying mechanisms remain largely unknown. An exceptionally large database of spontaneous conflict and post-conflict interactions in two outdoor-housed groups of chimpanzees lends support to the notion that affiliation toward aggressors reduces the latter's aggressive tendencies in that further aggression was less frequent after the occurrence of the affiliation. However, bystander affiliation toward aggressors occurred disproportionally between individuals that were socially close (i.e., affiliation partners) which suggest that it did not function to protect the actor itself against redirected aggression. Contrary to consolation behavior, it was provided most often by adult males and directed toward high ranking males, whereas females engaged less often in this behavior both as actors and recipients, suggesting that affiliation with aggressors is unlikely to be a reaction to the distress of others. We propose that bystander affiliation toward aggressors may function to strengthen bonds between valuable partners, probably as part of political strategies. Our findings also suggest that this post-conflict behavior may act as an alternative to reconciliation, i.e., post-conflict affiliation between opponents, in that it is more common when opponents fail to reconcile.

Highlights

  • Despite the advantages of group living, individuals in many animal societies have only partially overlapping interests

  • Social determinants The effect of a variety of variables on the likelihood of thirdparty appeasement was measured using Generalized Linear Mixed Models (GLMM)

  • Triadic Relations We investigated how relational variables between bystander and aggressor, and bystander and victim determined the occurrence of third-party appeasement by running GLMM

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Summary

Introduction

Despite the advantages of group living, individuals in many animal societies have only partially overlapping interests. Various conflict resolution strategies have been reported for over thirty primate species, both in captivity and in the wild [4,5,6], as well as for several non-primates [7,8,9,10,11]. Of particular interest are ‘‘triadic’’ conflict resolution strategies (i.e. initiated by individuals not directly involved in the conflict) since they may require knowledge of the social relationship among other group members [12]. Their study may provide valuable information about the evolution of cognitive and emotional mechanisms in primate and other animals [13]

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