Conflict and reconciliation in two groups of crab-eating monkeys differing in social status by birth |
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Authors: | Marina Butovskaya Alexander Kozintsev Christian Welker |
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Affiliation: | (1) Institute of Ethnology and Anthropology, Leninsky Prospekt 32A, Korp B 117334, Moscow, Russia;(2) Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography, 199034 Saint-Petersburg, Russia;(3) Department of Zoology and Comparative Anatomy, University of Kassel, D-34109 Kassel, Germany |
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Abstract: | Two groups of captive macaques (M. fascicularis) were studied at Kassel University, Germany. One included animals whose mothers were high-ranking, another, those whose mothers were low-ranking. The first group was a despotic community in which conflicts were severe and occurred mainly between single individuals; the reconciliation tendency was weak, the male leader was the controlling animal, and the affiliative preferences were marked. The second group was an egalitarian community split into two mutually hostile conalitions; the conflicts were less severe, the tendency for reconciliation was strong, the male leader could control only his own bloc and had no strong affiliative ties with other group members. |
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Keywords: | Macaques Aggression Dominance |
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