You scratch my back and I might scratch yours: The grooming habits of wild chimpanzees

You scratch my back and I might scratch yours: the grooming habits of wild chimpanzees
Chimpanzees. Credit: Dr Nicholas Newton-Fisher

Bystanders can influence the way adult male chimpanzees establish grooming interactions according to research by anthropologists at the University of Kent.

The results challenge existing theories and bring into question the long-held assumption that patterns of social interactions in and other primates reflect relationships that themselves indicate a level of trust between individuals.

The research was conducted by Dr Nicholas E. Newton-Fisher and colleague Dr Stefano Kaburu from Kent's School of Anthropology and Conservation. Published by the journal Scientific Reports, it reveals the clear influence of bystanders on grooming decisions, and, intriguingly, that such decisions did not appear to be based on prior grooming interactions.

It also found that with more - a larger audience - male chimps offered less grooming at the start of a bout, were more likely to abandon attempts to start a grooming interaction, and that their grooming efforts were less likely to be reciprocated.

The results suggest that the chimps' decisions on how much to invest in grooming interactions are based at least in part on whether there are other potential social partners close by.

While it is widely held that affiliative relationships, built up over a history of previous interactions, significantly shape future interactions, this was not supported by the research.

The findings therefore add to a growing body of evidence that grooming and other forms of in non-human primates are driven by considerations of direct benefits rather than relationships based on trust.

Wild chimpanzees were an ideal species with which to conduct the research because they live in large groups, associations between individuals are fluid, and social relationships variable.

For the study, entitled 'Bystanders, parcelling, and an absence of trust in the grooming interactions of wild male chimpanzees', Dr Kaburu and Dr Newton-Fisher studied the behaviour of chimpanzees in a 60-strong community from the Mahale Mountains National Park, Tanzania, which has been continuously studied for over 30 years. The chimpanzees were used to human observation and grooming interactions could be recorded in detail at close range.

More information: Stefano S. K. Kaburu et al. Bystanders, parcelling, and an absence of trust in the grooming interactions of wild male chimpanzees, Scientific Reports (2016). DOI: 10.1038/srep20634

Journal information: Scientific Reports

Provided by University of Kent

Citation: You scratch my back and I might scratch yours: The grooming habits of wild chimpanzees (2016, February 10) retrieved 29 March 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2016-02-grooming-habits-wild-chimpanzees.html
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