Abstract
Long-term observational studies in a number of animal species suggest that exchange patterns of social acts depend on long-term emotional bonds. Therefore, it is expected that the frequency of prosocial behavior will depend on the strength of such a bond. In this study we tested whether variation in relationship quality among unrelated individuals, i. e., "friends" and "nonfriends," is predictive of the prosocial behavior of long-tailed macaques in two experiments. First, we related relationship quality to prosociality in a dyadic prosociality test, and second, we gave subjects the choice to give to either a friend or a nonfriend in a triadic choice test. We show that prosocial behavior of long-tailed macaques in the dyadic test is not related to relationship quality. When given the choice to give to either a friend or a nonfriend in the triadic test, there is a minor indication that long-tailed macaques show a preference to give to their friends, yet this indication is neither significant nor consistent. In contrast, subordinate long-tailed macaques make a more "competitive" choice and avoid giving to the individual closest in rank. Therefore, in the short-term situation of experimental tests, prosocial behavior of long-tailed macaques seems unaffected by the relationship quality of the dyad/triad tested, and the relative dominance position of these dyads/triads seems to have a much stronger effect on their prosocial behavior. © 2011 The authors.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 237-247 |
Number of pages | 11 |
Journal | Primates |
Volume | 52 |
Issue number | 3 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 1 Jul 2011 |
Keywords
- Friendship
- Long-tailed macaques
- Prosociality
- Rank relations
- Relationship quality
- animal
- animal behavior
- article
- female
- Macaca fascicularis
- male
- Netherlands
- physiology
- psychological aspect
- social dominance