Abstract

The structure and dynamics of primate social groups are shaped by the social relationships of its members. These relationships are based on different types of interactions and vary in relation to the identity of the interactants and over time. Social network analysis tools represent a powerful and comprehensive method to characterise social interactions and recent methodological advances now allow the study of the multidimensionality of sociality via multilayer networks that incorporate multiple types of interactions. Here, we use a multidimensional network approach to investigate the multidimensionality of sociality of females in a captive group of mandrills. We constructed two multiplex networks based on agonistic, proximity and grooming interactions of 6–7 mature females to analyse the multidimensionality of relationships within two independent observation periods; and three multiplex networks (one for each interaction type) to examine how relationships changed between periods. Within each period, different individuals were the most central in each layer and at the multiplex level, and different layers (i.e., interaction types) contributed non-redundant information to the multilayer structure. Across periods, relationships based on the same interaction type also contained non-redundant information. These results indicate that female mandrills engage in multidimensional and dynamic relationships, suggesting that in order to represent the full complexity of relationships, networks need to be constructed from more than a single type of interaction and across time. Our results provide evidence for the potential value of the multilayer network approach to characterise the multidimensionality of primate sociality.

Highlights

  • Most primates form socially complex groups [1], in which individuals interact using a variety of behaviours

  • We investigate the multidimensionality of relationships among mature females in a small captive matriline of seven maternally related female mandrills, within and across two separate observation periods, using a multiplex network approach based on agonistic, proximity and grooming interactions

  • The results of the reducibility analysis on the multiplex networks of period one and two support prediction (1) and endorse the use of all interaction types to characterise the social relationships of the study females

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Summary

Objectives

We aim to investigate mandrill interactions and their emergent relationship properties through a multidimensional approach that includes different types of interactions, as well as how these develop and vary through time in the light of demographic variation [18]

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