| Literature DB >> 26456539 |
Mark Bowler1,2, Emily J E Messer1,3, Nicolas Claidière1,4, Andrew Whiten1.
Abstract
Wild and captive capuchin monkeys will anoint themselves with a range of strong smelling substances including millipedes, ants, limes and onions. Hypotheses for the function of the behaviour range from medicinal to social. However, capuchin monkeys may anoint in contact with other individuals, as well as individually. The function of social anointing has also been explained as either medicinal or to enhance social bonding. By manipulating the abundance of an anointing resource given to two groups of tufted capuchins, we tested predictions derived from the main hypotheses for the functions of anointing and in particular, social anointing. Monkeys engaged in individual and social anointing in similar proportions when resources were rare or common, and monkeys holding resources continued to join anointing groups, indicating that social anointing has functions beyond that of gaining access to resources. The distribution of individual and social anointing actions on the monkeys' bodies supports a medicinal function for both individual and social anointing, that requires no additional social bonding hypotheses. Individual anointing targets hard-to-see body parts that are harder to groom, whilst social anointing targets hard-to-reach body parts. Social anointing in capuchins is a form of mutual medication that improves coverage of topically applied anti-parasite medicines.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26456539 PMCID: PMC4601033 DOI: 10.1038/srep15030
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Hypotheses, predictions and results for the functions of anointing and social anointing in Cebus and Sapajus, and for the social behaviour of Sapajus during anointing.
| Hypothesis | Description | Predictions | Results | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Function of anointing | Scent marking hypothesis (Discussed in | Animals anoint with strong scents to communicate to group members or other groups | Different age-sex classes will anoint at different rates | NOT SUPPORTED During abundant resource conditions, all non-infant age-sex classes anointed at similar rates |
| The behaviour may be restricted to specific body parts | NOT SUPPORTED All body parts were anointed | |||
| Medicinal hypothesis (Baker 1996, Valderrama | Primates apply strong smelling materials to their fur to obtain a medical benefit such as reduced skin parasite load or reduced parasitism from biting insects | There will be no difference in anointing rates between age-sex classes | SUPPORTED During abundant resource conditions, all non-infant age-sex classes anointed at similar rates | |
| All body parts will be covered | SUPPORTED All body parts were anointed | |||
| Monkeys will anoint more on body parts that are not visible to them and are therefore harder to groom | SUPPORTED Monkeys anointed more on body parts that are not visible to them | |||
| Function of social anointing | Social bonding hypothesis (Baker, 1996, Leca | Animals strengthen social bonds by engaging in anointing behaviours in contact with group members | There will be no difference in the proportion of social anointing to individual anointing when resources are abundant or rare | SUPPORTED There was no difference in the proportions of social anointing (in time or number of actions) between the rare and abundant resource conditions |
| Monkeys will groom more immediately following sessions with more social anointing | NOT SUPPORTED There was no significant difference between grooming rates immediately after rare resource (less social anointing) and abundant resource (more social anointing) conditions. | |||
| Rare resource hypothesis (Valderrama | Individuals without items are obtaining chemicals from the bodies of others because they do not have direct access to resources | Social anointing will be much rarer, as a proportion of all anointing, when the anointing resource is abundant | NOT SUPPORTED There was no difference in the proportions of social anointing (in time or number of actions) between the rare and abundant resource conditions | |
| Groups of monkeys in which more than one individual has an anointing resource should be rare | NOT SUPPORTED Individuals holding onions socially anointed more often in groups of other monkeys that held onions | |||
| Coordination of treatment hypothesis (Meunier | Optimizes medicinal treatment by reducing group parasite load and therefore re infection of individuals | There will be no difference in the proportion of social anointing to individual anointing when resources are abundant or rare | SUPPORTED There was no difference in the proportions of social anointing (in time or number of actions) between the rare and abundant resource conditions | |
| Mutual application hypothesis (Perry 2008) | Treats hard-to-reach areas, such as between the shoulder blades, obtaining better coverage of topically applied medicines | There will be no difference in the proportion of social anointing to individual anointing when resources are abundant or rare | SUPPORTED There was no difference in the proportions of social anointing (in time or number of actions) between the rare and abundant resource conditions | |
| Animals holding anointing material will continue to seek out other anointing animals, and groups of monkeys in which more than one individual has an anointing resource will be common | SUPPORTED Individuals holding onions socially anointed more often in groups of other monkeys that held onions | |||
| Social anointing will target parts of the body that are inaccessible to an individual monkey and therefore achieve more complete coverage | SUPPORTED Social rubbing actions on ‘inaccessible’ body parts were more frequent than on ‘accessible’ body parts. | |||
| Social behaviour of | Chemo-signalling hypothesis (Paukner & Suomi 2008) | Aggression increases during and after rubbing because odours in the resource mask natural chemo-signalling in the capuchins | Levels of aggression will be different when resources, and therefore odour, are rare or abundant | NOT SUPPORTED Levels of aggression did not differ significantly when resources were rare or abundant. |
| Competition hypothesis (Perry 2008, Paukner & Suomi 2008) | Aggression increases during and after rubbing through competition for access to resource pieces | Lower-ranking individuals should anoint less than higher-ranking individuals to avoid aggression from higher-ranking individuals | PARTIALLY SUPPORTED Subordinate adult males anointed infrequently in the rare resource condition, but frequently in the abundant resource condition | |
| Fewer pieces of resource should create more competition, and therefore more aggression, than more pieces | NOT SUPPORTED There was no significant difference in the rates of aggression between the rare resource condition and the abundant resource condition | |||
| Dominance hypothesis | Increased aggression results from individuals re-affirming dominance relationships before and after the unusually close-proximity behaviour | There will be more aggression when there is more social rubbing | NOT SUPPORTED There was no significant difference in the rates of aggression between the rare resource (less social anointing) and abundant resource (more social anointing) conditions | |
It should be noted that the hypotheses are largely non-exclusive.
Figure 1Capuchin monkey body parts coded to record anointing actions.
Illustration by Mark Bowler.
Figure 2(a) Mean durations of anointing (including both individual and social anointing) in rare resource and abundant resource conditions in Sapajus sp. at Living Links. (b) Mean durations that focal monkeys holding onions spent in contact with other monkeys who also had or did not have onions, in the abundant resource condition.
Figure 3The relative durations of individual and social anointing in (a) rare resource and (b) abundant resource conditions for individuals in different age-sex classes.
Figure 4Total number of rubbing actions on ‘visible’ versus ‘non-visible’ body parts for individual rubbing actions during the abundant resource condition.
Figure 5Percentages of ‘individual’ and ‘social’ rubbing actions on each body part and carried babies.
Figure 6Percentages of rubbing actions on inaccessible body parts for individual and social rubbing actions, during the abundant resource condition.