Age-related change in adult chimpanzee social network integration

被引:17
|
作者
Gonzalez, Nicole Thompson [1 ,2 ]
Machanda, Zarin [3 ,4 ]
Otali, Emily [3 ]
Muller, Martin N. [1 ,3 ]
Enigk, Drew K. [1 ]
Wrangham, Richard [3 ,5 ]
Thompson, Melissa Emery [1 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Univ New Mexico, Dept Anthropol, Albuquerque, NM 87131 USA
[2] Univ New Mexico, Acad Sci Educ & Res Training Program, Hlth Sci Ctr, Albuquerque, NM 87131 USA
[3] Kibale Chimpanzee Project, Ft Portal, Uganda
[4] Tufts Univ, Dept Anthropol, Medford, MA 02155 USA
[5] Harvard Univ, Dept Human Evolutionary Biol, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会; 美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
social isolation; comparative gerontology; social ties; age-related disease; senescence; embeddedness; KIBALE NATIONAL-PARK; FEMALE CHIMPANZEES; OLDER-ADULTS; PATTERNS; SELECTIVITY; COMPETITION; LEADERSHIP; EVOLUTION; FITNESS; SUCCESS;
D O I
10.1093/emph/eoab040
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Background: Social isolation is a key risk factor for the onset and progression of age-related disease and mortality in humans. Nevertheless, older people commonly have narrowing social networks, with influences from both cultural factors and the constraints of senescence. We evaluate evolutionarily grounded models by studying social aging in wild chimpanzees, a system where such influences are more easily separated than in humans, and where individuals are long-lived and decline physically with age. Methodology: We applied social network analysis to examine age-related changes in social integration in a 7 + year mixed-longitudinal dataset on 38 wild adult chimpanzees (22 females, 16 males). Metrics of social integration included social attractivity and overt effort (directed degree and strength), social roles (betweenness and local transitivity) and embeddedness (eigenvector centrality) in grooming networks. Results: Both sexes reduced the strength of direct ties with age (males in-strength, females outstrength). However, males increased embeddedness with age, alongside cliquishness. These changes were independent of age-related changes in social and reproductive status. Both sexes maintained highly repeatable inter-individual differences in integration, particularly in mixed-sex networks. Conclusions and implications: As in humans, chimpanzees appear to experience senescence-related declines in social engagement. However, male social embeddedness and overall sex differences were patterned more similarly to humans in non-industrialized versus industrialized societies. Such comparisons suggest common evolutionary roots to ape social aging and that social isolation in older humans may hinge on novel cultural factors of many industrialized societies. Lastly, individual and sex differences are potentially important mediators of successful social aging in chimpanzees, as in humans. Lay summary: Few biological models explain why humans so commonly have narrowing social networks with age, despite the risk factor of social isolation that small networks pose. We use wild chimpanzees as a comparative system to evaluate models grounded in an evolutionary perspective, using social network analysis to examine changes in integration with age. Like humans in industrialized populations, chimpanzees had lower direct engagement with social partners as they aged. However, sex differences in integration and older males' central positions within the community network were more like patterns of sociality in several non-industrialized human populations. Our results suggest common evolutionary roots to human and chimpanzee social aging, and that the risk of social isolation with age in industrialized populations stems from novel cultural factors.
引用
收藏
页码:448 / 459
页数:12
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