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Abstract
Humans maintain extensive social ties of varying preferences, providing a range of opportunities for beneficial cooperative exchange that may promote collective action and our unique capacity for large-scale cooperation. Similarly, non-human animals maintain differentiated social relationships that promote dyadic cooperative exchange, but their link to cooperative collective action is little known. Here, we investigate the influence of social relationship properties on male and female chimpanzee participations in a costly form of group action, intergroup encounters. We find that intergroup encounter participation increases with a greater number of other participants as well as when participants are maternal kin or social bond partners, and that these effects are independent from one another and from the likelihood to associate with certain partners. Together, strong social relationships between kin and non-kin facilitate group-level cooperation in one of our closest living relatives, suggesting that social bonds may be integral to the evolution of cooperation in our own species.
Strong social bonds are known to affect pairwise cooperation in primates such chimpanzees. Here, Samuni et al. show that strong social bonds also influence participation in group-level cooperation (collective action in intergroup encounters) using a long-term dataset of wild chimpanzees.
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1 Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany (GRID:grid.419518.0) (ISNI:0000 0001 2159 1813); CSRS, Taï Chimpanzee Project, Abidjan, Ivory Coast (GRID:grid.462846.a) (ISNI:0000 0001 0697 1172); Harvard University, Department of Human Evolutionary Biology, Cambridge, USA (GRID:grid.38142.3c) (ISNI:000000041936754X)
2 Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany (GRID:grid.419518.0) (ISNI:0000 0001 2159 1813); CSRS, Taï Chimpanzee Project, Abidjan, Ivory Coast (GRID:grid.462846.a) (ISNI:0000 0001 0697 1172)