Network Analysis of Social Changes in a Captive Chimpanzee Community Following the Successful Integration of Two Adult Groups

Chimpanzees are highly territorial and have the potential to be extremely aggressive toward unfamiliar individuals. In the wild, transfer between groups is almost exclusively completed by nulliparous females, yet in captivity there is often a need to introduce and integrate a range of individuals, i...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of primatology 2013-03, Vol.75 (3), p.254-266
Hauptverfasser: SCHEL, ANNE MARIJKE, RAWLINGS, BRUCE, CLAIDIÈRE, NICOLAS, WILKE, CLAUDIA, WATHAN, JEN, RICHARDSON, JO, PEARSON, SOPHIE, S. HERRELKO, ELIZABETH, WHITEN, ANDREW, SLOCOMBE, KATIE
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container_end_page 266
container_issue 3
container_start_page 254
container_title American journal of primatology
container_volume 75
creator SCHEL, ANNE MARIJKE
RAWLINGS, BRUCE
CLAIDIÈRE, NICOLAS
WILKE, CLAUDIA
WATHAN, JEN
RICHARDSON, JO
PEARSON, SOPHIE
S. HERRELKO, ELIZABETH
WHITEN, ANDREW
SLOCOMBE, KATIE
description Chimpanzees are highly territorial and have the potential to be extremely aggressive toward unfamiliar individuals. In the wild, transfer between groups is almost exclusively completed by nulliparous females, yet in captivity there is often a need to introduce and integrate a range of individuals, including adult males. We describe the process of successfully integrating two groups of chimpanzees, each containing 11 individuals, in the Budongo Trail facility at the Royal Zoological Society of Scotland's Edinburgh Zoo. We use social network analysis to document changes in group dynamics within this population over the 16 months following integration. Aggression rates were low overall and members of the two original groups engaged in significantly fewer aggressive interactions over time. Association and grooming data indicate that relationships between members of the original groups became stronger and more affiliative with time. Despite these positive indicators the association data revealed the continued existence of two distinct subgroups, a year after integration. Our data show that when given complex space and freedom to exhibit natural fission–fusion groupings, in which the chimpanzees choose whom they wish to associate and interact with, the building of strong affiliative relationships with unfamiliar individuals is a very gradual process. Am. J. Primatol. 75:254‐266, 2013. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/ajp.22101
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subjects Animals
Animals, Zoo - physiology
Animals, Zoo - psychology
chimpanzee
Chimpanzees
Female
integration
Male
Models, Biological
Network analysis
Pan troglodytes - physiology
Pan troglodytes - psychology
Pan troglodytes - surgery
Primate behaviour
Scotland
Social Behavior
Social change
social network analysis
Social networks
Social relations
social relationships
title Network Analysis of Social Changes in a Captive Chimpanzee Community Following the Successful Integration of Two Adult Groups
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