Social grooming in Barbary macaques
Abstrakt
Social grooming is one of the most common forms of affiliative behaviour
among socially living animals and has been in the centre of interest from the
early beginnings of primatology. Social grooming is a behaviour in
which social animals, clean or maintain one another's body and many studies
focused on investigating the function of grooming behaviour. This thesis
consists of general introduction and three studies that investigate social
grooming in a population of semi-free ranging Barbary macaques from
Gibraltar. The studies are based on original data and the results provide an
interesting and new insight into the grooming behaviour in Barbary
macaques. The first study focused on grooming patterns among females and
we found that grooming was directed up the hierarchy, was affected by
friendship and kinship. In the second study we tested the effect of maternal
status on grooming among females and results showed that mothers gave
less grooming but did not receive more grooming from other females. On the
basis of these results we proposed that the observed patterns would be better
explained by time constraints posed on mothers, rather than by grooming for
infant handling exchange. In the last study we investigated the relationship
between grooming and sexual activity between males and females. Our data
showed that males as well as females preferred for mating activities those
individuals that groom them most.