An experimental evaluation of the consistency of competitive ability and agonistic dominance in different social contexts in captive bonobos
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Publication date
1999-11-18
Authors
Vervaecke, H.
Vries, Han de
Elsacker, Linda van
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Abstract
Bonobos have been described as a relatively egalitarian and female dominant species. The
exact nature and quality of their dominance relationships and the existence of female
dominance are current topics of dispute. We investigated the consistency across social
contexts, the stability in time, and the degree of expression of the competitive feeding
ability and agonistic dominance in a captive group of bonobos. First, we examined whether
the competitive feeding ranks and agonistic ranks differed in different dyadic contexts,
triadic contexts and the whole group context. For some pairs of animals the dominance
relationships with respect to competitive feeding altered with different group compositions.
The agonistic dominance relationships changed accordingly. The competitive feeding ranks
and agonistic ranks in the experiments correlated strongly with each other. The alpha position
was occupied by a female, but not all females outranked all males. We suggest that females
can profit from each others presence to gain inter-sexual dominance. Second, although the
agonistic rank order in the whole group remained the same over at least five years, some
dyadic competitive feeding ranks changed over time, resulting in a stronger female intersexual
dominance. Third, the degree of expression of the behaviors used to quantify dyadic
competitive and agonistic dominance was not high, in line with the popular egalitarian
epithet. Notwithstanding its low consistency across contexts, the dominance hierarchy in the
whole group has a strong predictive value for other social relationships such as grooming.
Given this strong effect of rank on other behaviours and given the strong dependency of
rank on social context, the choice of the right party members may be a crucial factor in the
fission-fusion processes of free-ranging bonobos.
Keywords
bonobo (Pan paniscus), rank orders, feeding scores, agonistic ranks, peering