Abstract

Social grooming in the animal kingdom is common and serves several functions, from removing ectoparasites to maintaining social bonds between conspecifics. We examined whether time spent grooming with others in a highly social mammal species was associated with infection status for gastrointestinal parasites. Of six parasites detected, one (Trichuris sp.) was associated with social grooming behaviors, but more specifically with direct physical contact with others. Individuals infected with Trichuris sp. spent significantly less time grooming conspecifics than those not infected, and time in direct contact with others was the major predictor of infection status. One model correctly predicted infection status for Trichuris sp. with a reliability of 95.17% overall when the variables used were time spent in direct contact and time spent grooming others. This decrease in time spent grooming and interacting with others is likely a sickness behavior displayed by individuals with less energy or motivation for non-essential behaviors. This study emphasizes the possible links between host behavior and parasitic infections and highlights the need for an understanding of a study population's parasitic infections when attempting to interpret animal behavior.

Highlights

  • Grooming is widespread in the animal kingdom, from insects [1,2,3,4] to rodents [5,6,7,8], birds [9,10,11,12,13], and primates [14,15,16,17]

  • Social contact relates to infection status with whipworm in vervet monkeys frequently were more likely to become infected with tuberculosis (Mycobacterium bovis) than those that groomed others less frequently [51]

  • We examined various dimensions of vervet monkey (Chlorocebus pygerythrus) grooming behavior, including time spent grooming others, time spent being groomed by others, and time spent in direct contact with others

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Summary

Introduction

Grooming is widespread in the animal kingdom, from insects [1,2,3,4] to rodents [5,6,7,8], birds [9,10,11,12,13], and primates [14,15,16,17]. Grooming is generally classified into two types: self-grooming, in which individuals groom themselves, and social grooming or allogrooming in which individuals groom others or are groomed by others [18]. Social contact relates to infection status with whipworm in vervet monkeys

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