Abstract

Experimental laboratory evidence suggests that animals with disrupted social systems express weakened relationship strengths and have more exclusive social associations, and that these changes have functional consequences. A key question is whether anthropogenic pressures have a similar impact on the social structure of wild animal communities. We addressed this question by constructing a social network from 6years of systematically collected photographic capture-recapture data spanning 1,139 individual adult female Masai giraffes inhabiting a large, unfenced, heterogeneous landscape in northern Tanzania. We then used the social network to identify distinct social communities, and tested whether social or anthropogenic and other environmental factors predicted differences in social structure among these communities. We reveal that giraffes have a multilevel social structure. Local preferences in associations among individuals scale up to a number of distinct, but spatially overlapping, social communities, that can be viewed as a large interconnected metapopulation. We then find that communities that are closer to traditional compounds of Indigenous Masai people express weaker relationship strengths and the giraffes in these communities are more exclusive in their associations. The patterns we characterize in response to proximity to humans reflect the predictions of disrupted social systems. Near bomas, fuelwood cutting can reduce food resources, and groups of giraffes are more likely to encounter livestock and humans on foot, thus disrupting the social associations among group members. Our results suggest that human presence could potentially be playing an important role in determining the conservation future of this megaherbivore.

Highlights

  • Sociality provides the channel through which information, genetic material and diseases spread through populations (Kurvers, Krause, Croft, Wilson, & Wolf, 2014; Sih, Spiegel, Godfrey, Leu, & Bull, 2018)

  • We addressed this question by constructing a social network from 6 years of systematically collected photographic capture–recapture data spanning 1,139 individual adult female Masai giraffes inhabiting a large, unfenced, heterogeneous landscape in northern Tanzania

  • | Journal of Animal Ecolo gy 3 giraffes cannot maintain as large group sizes because groups living near humans are repeatedly disturbed, they should preferentially associate with fewer individuals, reducing the average relationship strength and being more exclusive in their social associations, likely because instability increases the costs of maintaining many concurrent relationships

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Sociality provides the channel through which information, genetic material and diseases spread through populations (Kurvers, Krause, Croft, Wilson, & Wolf, 2014; Sih, Spiegel, Godfrey, Leu, & Bull, 2018). It requires large-scale studies of individually identified animals across replicated social groups spanning multiple environmental gradients We addressed this challenge by collecting and analysing long-term data from a metapopulation of adult female Masai giraffes Giraffa camelopardalis tippelskirchi in Tanzania, and testing whether the environment—especially proximity to human settlements—shapes social structure. | Journal of Animal Ecolo gy 3 giraffes cannot maintain as large group sizes because groups living near humans are repeatedly disturbed, they should preferentially associate with fewer individuals, reducing the average relationship strength and being more exclusive in their social associations, likely because instability increases the costs of maintaining many concurrent relationships To test this prediction, we constructed social networks using individual-based photographic capture–recapture data systematically collected over 6 years from a metapopulation of 1,139 wild adult female giraffes in a large and ecologically diverse area of northern Tanzania: the Tarangire Ecosystem (TE). We hypothesized that social communities of giraffes living closer to both types of human settlements would exhibit weaker relationship strengths and more exclusive social associations—a signature of a disrupted social environment according to Maldonado-Chaparro et al (2018)

Findings
| MATERIALS AND METHODS
| DISCUSSION
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