Social Complexity In A Large And Small Group Of Olive Baboons
Abstract
Group size is known to correlate with various indices of brain size in the
primates. The possibility that increases in group size foster social complexity forms
the central empirical topic of this thesis. A ten month field study of olive baboons,
Papio cynocephalus anubis, was carried out on the Laikipia Plateau,
Kenya. Data were collected on a wide range of social behaviours in two troops,
one smaller than the mean group size for Papio and one larger.
The concepts of complexity and social complexity are critically examined
with a view to their quantification in behaviour and cognition. The status of social
complexity in the debate concerning the evolution of high intelligence in the Primate
Order is discussed. Dimensions of social complexity are developed and then
investigated empirically.
Females in the two troops showed similar grooming frequencies and
grooming network sizes. However, the troops differed in the patterning of their
grooming with respect to rank: individuals in the small troop groomed those of high
rank, individuals in the large troop groomed those of rank similar to themselves.
Cluster analysis of spatial proximities showed no sign of cliquishness in
either troop.
Females formed associations with particular males ('friendships') in both
troops but there were no clear differences in either the number or stability of these
associations.
The rate of interaction was higher in the large troop, but, proportional to
total interaction rates, the rates of agonistic and polyadic interactions were not. The
rate of interaction was higher for adult and sub-adult females than for adult and subadult
males In comparison, the proportion of interactions that were agonistic was
greater for the adult and sub-adult males.
The variability of response to affiliation that individuals faced was the same
across the two troops. Males, however, faced more variability than did females
largely because of a high number of avoidant responses.
The absence of strong differences in social complexity between differently
sized troops suggests that, proximally, cognitive complexity limits social
complexity. Thus, interspecific comparisons may prove to be the most fertile area
of research into complexity in the future.