Aggression and social support predict long‐term cortisol levels in captive tufted capuchin monkeys (Cebus [Sapajus] apella)

Many nonhuman primates live in complex social groups in which they regularly encounter both social stressors such as aggression and social support such as that provided by long‐term affiliative relationships. Repeated exposure to social stressors may result in chronically elevated cortisol levels th...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of primatology 2019-07, Vol.81 (7), p.e23001-n/a
Hauptverfasser: Schrock, Allie E., Leard, Corinne, Lutz, Meredith C., Meyer, Jerrold S., Gazes, Regina Paxton
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Many nonhuman primates live in complex social groups in which they regularly encounter both social stressors such as aggression and social support such as that provided by long‐term affiliative relationships. Repeated exposure to social stressors may result in chronically elevated cortisol levels that can have deleterious physical effects such as impaired immune function, cardiovascular disease, and reduced brain function. In contrast, affiliative social relationships may act as a buffer, dampening the release of cortisol in response to acute and chronic stressors. Understanding how social stressors and social support predict cortisol levels is therefore essential to understanding how social situations relate to health and welfare. We studied this relationship in 16 socially housed captive brown capuchin monkeys (Cebus [Sapajus] apella) by comparing long‐term hair cortisol levels with behavioral measures of social stress (dominance rank, rank certainty, and amount of aggression received) and social support (amount of affiliation and centrality in the affiliative social network of the group). Dominance rank, rank certainty, amount of affiliation, and age were not significant predictors of long‐term cortisol levels in this population. Instead, long‐term cortisol levels were positively related to the amount of aggression received and negatively related to centrality in the affiliative social network of the group. This pattern may be attributed to the species’ socially tolerant dominance system and to the availability of social support across the dominance hierarchy. Both social support, measured by centrality in the affiliative network of the group, and social stress, measured by the amount of aggression received, relate to long‐term cortisol levels in socially housed capuchin monkeys. Monkeys who are more central to the affiliative network have lower long‐term cortisol levels, and monkeys who receive more aggression have higher long‐term cortisol levels. HIGHLIGHTS Long‐term cortisol levels are positively related to the aggression received and negatively related to the centrality in the affiliative social network. Both social stressors and social support contribute to long‐term cortisol levels in primates.
ISSN:0275-2565
1098-2345
DOI:10.1002/ajp.23001