Primate behavior, organization, mating patterns.
The "why" questions of behavior: how can we separate these questions, especially as related to social organization. What’s the difference between them? For example, A and D are very closely related, but A is phylogenetic, or what’s already happened, while D is what’s happening now.
Differences between sexes will impact and structure society.
OSR is expressed and limited by energetic constraints. The higher the OSR, the lower the competition for females. One male – multi females organization results in one male constantly observing while females groom, etc. Adult male has very low internal interaction. The operational sex ratio and demography of groups has a huge impact on the way groups are structured.
We assume, in evaluating mating patterns, that females map to resources and males map to females. Why would a female want to be social? Mating patterns (and resulting social structure) are a compromise between male and female strategies constrained by external and internal variables. Mating patterns, broadly labeled as polygamous, polygynous, polyandrous, and to a lesser extent behaviorally monogamous, really exist in more subtle variations:
Group living has demonstrated costs and benefits. The general model of food competition or foraging is the most often cited explanation for group living. Additional hypotheses supporting the evolution of group living include response to predation pressure, assistance rearing offspring, and infanticide avoidance.
| Species |
Group composition |
Study |
|---|---|---|
| Propithecus diadema edwardsi | Unimale/mutlifemale= 9 groups Unifemale/multimale=11 groups Two-adult group=12 groups |
Pochron and Wright, 2003 |
| Semnopithecus entellus | Unimale/multifemale= 27 groups Multifemale/multimale=229 groups all male=4 groups |
Treves and Chapman, 1996 |
| Hylobates lar | Two-adult group= 3 groups Unifemale/multimale= 1 group |
Brockelman, et al., 1998 |
| Gorilla gorilla berengei | 7 groups observed Unimale/Multifemale= 41.1% of observation time Multimale/multifemale=36.8% of observation time allmale=22.1% of observation time |
Robbins, 1995 |
| Saguinus mystax | Two adult group= 27 groups Unimale/multifemale= 30 groups Unifemale/multimale= 52 groups Multifemale/Multimale= 163 groups |
Sussman and Garber, 1987 |
Social organization is emergent property stemming from the combining of the following broad elements. Why a female would be social is ultimately irrelevant, due to the phylogenetic role. It is more important to identify social organization “rules” because these emerge from multiple levels of understanding and behaviors (mating system, social constraints, etc). The group is just a snapshot.
Emergence is an important part of social reality.
Sociality is adaptive. What is the social mind? Learning in respect to being aware of the other members of the group. Cueing individuals for interactions with other individuals; being perceptive to other individuals' reactions/expectations. These constraints are especially important to address in research design.
Primates in Perspective. 2007. C.J. Campbell, A. Fuentes, K.C. MacKinnon, M. Panger, S.K. Bearder. Oxford University Press.
Chapter 37: Social Organization: Social Systems and the Complexities in Understanding the Evolution of Primate Behavior - Fuentes