Abstract

Simple SummarySocial grooming strengthens affiliative relationships between participants in many social primates. Three hypotheses regarding the function of mutual grooming in feral horses were tested: the affiliative relationship strengthening hypothesis, the worsened relationship restoring hypothesis, and the parasite removal hypothesis. All the nine horses in the “6m” herd in a Misaki feral horse (Equus caballus) herd in Cape Toi, Japan, were investigated in terms of kinship, grooming, aggression, proximity, social rank, and social network. The correlations between mutual grooming and proximity and between aggression and proximity were established mathematically. Controlling for kinship, there were significant positive partial correlations between mutual grooming and proximity and between aggression and proximity. No correlation was observed between aggression and mutual grooming. Individuals that spent less time on self-grooming invested longer times receiving grooming from other individuals. In a feral horse population, mutual grooming maintains hygiene by controlling ectoparasites and forges affiliative interactions between herd members.Although herd size, structure, stability, and social rank among Misaki feral horses have been reported, no studies have been conducted on the affiliative relationships and interactions among members in a Misaki horse herd. The validity of three hypotheses regarding the function of social grooming, the affiliative relationship strengthening hypothesis, the worsened relationship restoring hypothesis, and the grooming parasite removal hypothesis, were tested in a Misaki feral horse (Equus caballus) herd in Cape Toi, Japan. All the nine horses in the “6m” herd were investigated in terms of kinship, grooming, aggression, proximity, social rank, and social network. Mutual grooming occurred only in pairs and was almost perfectly symmetrical. For each member, there was a significant negative correlation between total grooming received from other individuals and self-grooming. Controlling for kinship, there were significant positive partial correlations between mutual grooming and proximity and between aggression and proximity. No correlation was observed between aggression and mutual grooming. The results suggest that mutual grooming symmetry may contribute that both participants simultaneously benefit from parasite removal and strengthen affiliative relationships between seasonally changing herd members; however, mutual grooming did not foster restoring the worsened relationship following aggression promoted by physical proximity. The findings of this study may elucidate the mechanisms by which interactions between herd members are maintained or strengthened.

Highlights

  • In many mammals, individuals strengthen affiliative relationships with unrelated individuals to enhance their reproductive success [1,2,3]

  • Pairs that equalize the amount of social grooming in the long term maintain their affiliative relationships [5,6]

  • The objective of the study was to clarify the role of mutual grooming within the feral herd by testing the aforementioned predictions derived from three hypotheses regarding the function of mutual grooming; the affiliative relationship strengthening hypothesis, the worsened relationship restoring hypothesis, and the grooming parasite removal hypothesis

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Summary

Introduction

Individuals strengthen affiliative relationships with unrelated individuals to enhance their reproductive success [1,2,3]. Grooming exchanges continue over extended periods in groups with long-term stability [9,10,11]. Pairs that equalize the amount of social grooming in the long term maintain their affiliative relationships [5,6]. Feral horses live in herds comprising one to a few adult males (stallions), several unrelated adult females (mares), and immature offspring of both sexes (fillies and colts) [13,14,15,16,17]. The social rank established among herd members shows long-term stability [18,19,20]

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