Recruitment and monitoring behaviors by leaders predict following in wild Barbary macaques (<i>Macaca sylvanus</i>)

For group-living animals it is essential to maintain the cohesiveness of the group when traveling. Individuals have to make an accurate decision about where and when to move. Communication before and during the departure of the first individual may play a crucial role in synchronizing a collective m...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: A. Seltmann, M. Franz, B. Majolo, M. Qarro, J. Ostner, O. Schülke
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2016-07-01
Series:Primate Biology
Online Access:http://www.primate-biol.net/3/23/2016/pb-3-23-2016.pdf
id doaj-afb18ac9793f4f5087c4edeaafe47486
record_format Article
spelling doaj-afb18ac9793f4f5087c4edeaafe474862020-11-24T22:24:06ZengCopernicus PublicationsPrimate Biology2363-47072363-47152016-07-0132233110.5194/pb-3-23-2016Recruitment and monitoring behaviors by leaders predict following in wild Barbary macaques (<i>Macaca sylvanus</i>)A. Seltmann0M. Franz1B. Majolo2M. Qarro3J. Ostner4O. Schülke5Department of Behavioral Ecology, Georg-August University Göttingen, Göttingen, GermanyDepartment of Wildlife Diseases, Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research, Berlin, GermanySchool of Psychology, University of Lincoln, Lincoln, UKEcole Nationale Forestière d'Ingénieurs, Salé, MoroccoDepartment of Behavioral Ecology, Georg-August University Göttingen, Göttingen, GermanyDepartment of Behavioral Ecology, Georg-August University Göttingen, Göttingen, GermanyFor group-living animals it is essential to maintain the cohesiveness of the group when traveling. Individuals have to make an accurate decision about where and when to move. Communication before and during the departure of the first individual may play a crucial role in synchronizing a collective movement. We hypothesized that individuals in a wild primate group use signals or cues prior to and after departure to achieve collective movements. With two observers we used all-occurrences behavior sampling of collective movements in a group of wild Barbary macaques (<i>Macaca sylvanus</i>) in the Middle Atlas, Morocco. The number of individuals displaying pre-departure behavior predicted the success of an initiation of a collective movement. Pauses of the first departing individual after departure enhanced following behavior and might have served as recruitment signal. However, the opposite was the case for back-glancing, which functions as a monitoring signal in other species. Because in our study frequently back-glancing individuals were also less socially integrated, back glances may better be interpreted as indicators of hesitation and insecurity. To successfully initiate a collective movement, it seemed to be sufficient for a socially integrated group member to take action when other group members signal their willingness prior to departure and to occasionally wait for the group while moving.http://www.primate-biol.net/3/23/2016/pb-3-23-2016.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author A. Seltmann
M. Franz
B. Majolo
M. Qarro
J. Ostner
O. Schülke
spellingShingle A. Seltmann
M. Franz
B. Majolo
M. Qarro
J. Ostner
O. Schülke
Recruitment and monitoring behaviors by leaders predict following in wild Barbary macaques (<i>Macaca sylvanus</i>)
Primate Biology
author_facet A. Seltmann
M. Franz
B. Majolo
M. Qarro
J. Ostner
O. Schülke
author_sort A. Seltmann
title Recruitment and monitoring behaviors by leaders predict following in wild Barbary macaques (<i>Macaca sylvanus</i>)
title_short Recruitment and monitoring behaviors by leaders predict following in wild Barbary macaques (<i>Macaca sylvanus</i>)
title_full Recruitment and monitoring behaviors by leaders predict following in wild Barbary macaques (<i>Macaca sylvanus</i>)
title_fullStr Recruitment and monitoring behaviors by leaders predict following in wild Barbary macaques (<i>Macaca sylvanus</i>)
title_full_unstemmed Recruitment and monitoring behaviors by leaders predict following in wild Barbary macaques (<i>Macaca sylvanus</i>)
title_sort recruitment and monitoring behaviors by leaders predict following in wild barbary macaques (<i>macaca sylvanus</i>)
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Primate Biology
issn 2363-4707
2363-4715
publishDate 2016-07-01
description For group-living animals it is essential to maintain the cohesiveness of the group when traveling. Individuals have to make an accurate decision about where and when to move. Communication before and during the departure of the first individual may play a crucial role in synchronizing a collective movement. We hypothesized that individuals in a wild primate group use signals or cues prior to and after departure to achieve collective movements. With two observers we used all-occurrences behavior sampling of collective movements in a group of wild Barbary macaques (<i>Macaca sylvanus</i>) in the Middle Atlas, Morocco. The number of individuals displaying pre-departure behavior predicted the success of an initiation of a collective movement. Pauses of the first departing individual after departure enhanced following behavior and might have served as recruitment signal. However, the opposite was the case for back-glancing, which functions as a monitoring signal in other species. Because in our study frequently back-glancing individuals were also less socially integrated, back glances may better be interpreted as indicators of hesitation and insecurity. To successfully initiate a collective movement, it seemed to be sufficient for a socially integrated group member to take action when other group members signal their willingness prior to departure and to occasionally wait for the group while moving.
url http://www.primate-biol.net/3/23/2016/pb-3-23-2016.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT aseltmann recruitmentandmonitoringbehaviorsbyleaderspredictfollowinginwildbarbarymacaquesimacacasylvanusi
AT mfranz recruitmentandmonitoringbehaviorsbyleaderspredictfollowinginwildbarbarymacaquesimacacasylvanusi
AT bmajolo recruitmentandmonitoringbehaviorsbyleaderspredictfollowinginwildbarbarymacaquesimacacasylvanusi
AT mqarro recruitmentandmonitoringbehaviorsbyleaderspredictfollowinginwildbarbarymacaquesimacacasylvanusi
AT jostner recruitmentandmonitoringbehaviorsbyleaderspredictfollowinginwildbarbarymacaquesimacacasylvanusi
AT oschulke recruitmentandmonitoringbehaviorsbyleaderspredictfollowinginwildbarbarymacaquesimacacasylvanusi
_version_ 1725762232472567808