Abstract

Agonism is common in group-living animals, shaping dominance relationships and ultimately impacting individual fitness. Rates of agonism vary considerably among taxa, however, and explaining this variation has been central in ecological models of female social relationships in primates. Early iterations of these models posited a link to diet, with more frequent agonism predicted in frugivorous species due to the presumed greater contestability of fruits relative to other food types. Although some more recent studies have suggested that dietary categories may be poor predictors of contest competition among primates, to date there have been no broad, cross-taxa comparisons of rates of female-female agonism in relation to diet. This study tests whether dietary variables do indeed predict rates of female agonism and further investigates the role of group size (i.e., number of competitors) and substrate use (i.e., degree of arboreality) on the frequency of agonism. Data from 44 wild, unprovisioned groups, including 3 strepsirhine species, 3 platyrrhines, 5 colobines, 10 cercopithecines, and 2 hominoids were analyzed using phylogenetically controlled and uncontrolled methods. Results indicate that diet does not predict agonistic rates, with trends actually being in the opposite direction than predicted for all taxa except cercopithecines. In contrast, agonistic rates are positively associated with group size and possibly degree of terrestriality. Competitor density and perhaps the risk of fighting, thus, appear more important than general diet in predicting agonism among female primates. We discuss the implications of these results for socio-ecological hypotheses.

Highlights

  • Intraspeciic agonistic interactions are a nearly universal consequence of the competition for limited resources that animals face

  • Diet was a weak predictor of agonistic rates relative to the other independent variables considered; dietary variables were not included in the best subset models, suggesting that they do not explain more of the variance in rates of agonism beyond that explained by group size

  • The direction of the efect of frugivory on agonistic rates difered between taxa; there was a nonsigniicant trend in the predicted direction among cercopithecine primates, the trend was in the opposite direction among noncercopithecines in the phylogenetically controlled analysis, with increased frugivory being related to decreased agonism

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Summary

Introduction

Intraspeciic agonistic interactions are a nearly universal consequence of the competition for limited resources that animals face. Agonism is expected primarily in association with high-value resources that—due to their size, depletion time, and spatiotemporal distribution—can be monopolized by a subset of individuals to the exclusion of others (Wrangham 1980; van Schaik 1989; Sterck et al 1997; Isbell and Young 2002). If these criteria are not met, agonism is not expected to occur.

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