Where Sociality And Relatedness Diverge: The Genetic Basis For Hierarchical Social Structure In African Elephants. (2009)

Hierarchical properties characterize elephant fission–fusion social organization whereby stable groups of individuals coalesce into higher order groups or split in a predictable manner.

Journal

Proceedings of the Royal Society

Author(s)

Wittemyer G., Okello, J.B.A., Rasmussen, H.B., Arctander, P., Nyakaana, S., Douglas-Hamilton I., Siegismund, H.R.

Date Published Wittemyer-et-al.-2009-Where-sociality-and-relatedness-diverge-the-genet

Proceedings of the Royal Society: Biological Sciences doi: 10.1098/rspb.2009.0941  

Summary

Hierarchical properties characterize elephant fission–fusion social organization whereby stable groups of individuals coalesce into higher order groups or split in a predictable manner. This hierarchical complexity is rare among animals and, as such, an examination of the factors driving its emergence offers unique insight into the evolution of social behaviour. Investigation of the genetic basis for such social affiliation demonstrates that while the majority of core social groups (second-tier affiliates) are significantly related, this is not exclusively the case. As such, direct benefits received through membership of these groups appear to be salient to their formation and maintenance. Further analysis revealed that the majority of groups in the two higher social echelons (third and fourth tiers) are typically not significantly related.

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