Royal Society Open Science (May 2023)

Social network inheritance and differentiation in wild baboons

  • Vittoria Roatti,
  • Guy Cowlishaw,
  • Elise Huchard,
  • Alecia Carter

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.230219
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 5

Abstract

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Immatures' social development may be fundamental to understand important biological processes, such as social information transmission through groups, that can vary with age and sex. Our aim was to determine how social networks change with age and differ between sexes in wild immature baboons, group-living primates that readily learn socially. Our results show that immature baboons inherited their mothers' networks and differentiated from them as they aged, increasing their association with partners of similar age and the same sex. Males were less bonded to their matriline and became more peripheral with age compared to females. Our results may pave the way to further studies testing a new hypothetical framework: in female-philopatric societies, social information transmission may be constrained at the matrilineal level by age- and sex-driven social clustering.

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