date: 2022-06-16T06:05:53Z pdf:PDFVersion: 1.6 pdf:docinfo:title: Social integration predicts survival in female white-faced capuchin monkeys xmp:CreatorTool: Adobe InDesign 15.1 (Windows) access_permission:can_print_degraded: true subject: doi: arac043 Behavioral Ecology, 27 May 2022 Abstract: Across multiple species of social mammals, a growing number of studies have found that individual sociality is associated with survival. In long-lived species, like primates, lifespan is one of the main components of fitness. We used 18 years of data from the Lomas Barbudal Monkey Project to quantify social integration in 11 capuchin (Cebus capucinus) groups and tested whether female survivorship was associated with females? tendencies to interact with three types of partners: (1) all group members, (2) adult females, and (3) adult males. We found strong evidence that females who engaged more with other females in affiliative interactions and foraged in close proximity experienced increased survivorship. We found some weak evidence that females might also benefit from engaging in more support in agonistic contexts with other females. These benefits were evident in models that account for the females? rank and group size. Female interactions with all group members also increased survival, but the estimates of the effects were more uncertain. In interactions with adult males, only females who provided more grooming to males survived longer. The results presented here suggest that social integration may result in survival-related benefits. Females might enjoy these benefits through exchanging grooming for other currencies, such as coalitionary support or tolerance. pdfa:PDFVersion: A-3a xmpMM:History:Action: converted language: en-US dc:format: application/pdf; version=1.6 pdf:docinfo:creator_tool: Adobe InDesign 15.1 (Windows) access_permission:fill_in_form: true xmpMM:History:When: 2022-05-27T16:10:38Z pdf:encrypted: false dc:title: Social integration predicts survival in female white-faced capuchin monkeys modified: 2022-06-16T06:05:53Z cp:subject: doi: arac043 Behavioral Ecology, 27 May 2022 Abstract: Across multiple species of social mammals, a growing number of studies have found that individual sociality is associated with survival. In long-lived species, like primates, lifespan is one of the main components of fitness. We used 18 years of data from the Lomas Barbudal Monkey Project to quantify social integration in 11 capuchin (Cebus capucinus) groups and tested whether female survivorship was associated with females? tendencies to interact with three types of partners: (1) all group members, (2) adult females, and (3) adult males. We found strong evidence that females who engaged more with other females in affiliative interactions and foraged in close proximity experienced increased survivorship. We found some weak evidence that females might also benefit from engaging in more support in agonistic contexts with other females. These benefits were evident in models that account for the females? rank and group size. Female interactions with all group members also increased survival, but the estimates of the effects were more uncertain. In interactions with adult males, only females who provided more grooming to males survived longer. The results presented here suggest that social integration may result in survival-related benefits. Females might enjoy these benefits through exchanging grooming for other currencies, such as coalitionary support or tolerance. xmpMM:History:SoftwareAgent: Preflight pdf:docinfo:subject: doi: arac043 Behavioral Ecology, 27 May 2022 Abstract: Across multiple species of social mammals, a growing number of studies have found that individual sociality is associated with survival. In long-lived species, like primates, lifespan is one of the main components of fitness. We used 18 years of data from the Lomas Barbudal Monkey Project to quantify social integration in 11 capuchin (Cebus capucinus) groups and tested whether female survivorship was associated with females? tendencies to interact with three types of partners: (1) all group members, (2) adult females, and (3) adult males. We found strong evidence that females who engaged more with other females in affiliative interactions and foraged in close proximity experienced increased survivorship. We found some weak evidence that females might also benefit from engaging in more support in agonistic contexts with other females. These benefits were evident in models that account for the females? rank and group size. Female interactions with all group members also increased survival, but the estimates of the effects were more uncertain. In interactions with adult males, only females who provided more grooming to males survived longer. The results presented here suggest that social integration may result in survival-related benefits. Females might enjoy these benefits through exchanging grooming for other currencies, such as coalitionary support or tolerance. xmpMM:History:InstanceID: uuid:3021dc7d-1c38-4c17-8f23-3f1dcb8c1aad pdf:docinfo:creator: Kotrina Kajokaite, Andrew Whalen, Jeremy Koster, Susan Perry meta:author: Kotrina Kajokaite, Andrew Whalen, Jeremy Koster, Susan Perry trapped: False meta:creation-date: 2022-05-27T10:39:37Z created: 2022-05-27T10:39:37Z access_permission:extract_for_accessibility: true Creation-Date: 2022-05-27T10:39:37Z xmpMM:DerivedFrom:DocumentID: xmp.did:73cb918f-1a59-0441-9501-fc2859f0980b pdfaid:part: 3 Author: Kotrina Kajokaite, Andrew Whalen, Jeremy Koster, Susan Perry producer: Adobe PDF Library 15.0; modified using iTextSharp 4.1.6 by 1T3XT pdf:docinfo:producer: Adobe PDF Library 15.0; modified using iTextSharp 4.1.6 by 1T3XT pdf:unmappedUnicodeCharsPerPage: 0 dc:description: doi: arac043 Behavioral Ecology, 27 May 2022 Abstract: Across multiple species of social mammals, a growing number of studies have found that individual sociality is associated with survival. In long-lived species, like primates, lifespan is one of the main components of fitness. We used 18 years of data from the Lomas Barbudal Monkey Project to quantify social integration in 11 capuchin (Cebus capucinus) groups and tested whether female survivorship was associated with females? tendencies to interact with three types of partners: (1) all group members, (2) adult females, and (3) adult males. We found strong evidence that females who engaged more with other females in affiliative interactions and foraged in close proximity experienced increased survivorship. We found some weak evidence that females might also benefit from engaging in more support in agonistic contexts with other females. These benefits were evident in models that account for the females? rank and group size. Female interactions with all group members also increased survival, but the estimates of the effects were more uncertain. In interactions with adult males, only females who provided more grooming to males survived longer. The results presented here suggest that social integration may result in survival-related benefits. Females might enjoy these benefits through exchanging grooming for other currencies, such as coalitionary support or tolerance. access_permission:modify_annotations: true dc:creator: Kotrina Kajokaite, Andrew Whalen, Jeremy Koster, Susan Perry description: doi: arac043 Behavioral Ecology, 27 May 2022 Abstract: Across multiple species of social mammals, a growing number of studies have found that individual sociality is associated with survival. In long-lived species, like primates, lifespan is one of the main components of fitness. We used 18 years of data from the Lomas Barbudal Monkey Project to quantify social integration in 11 capuchin (Cebus capucinus) groups and tested whether female survivorship was associated with females? tendencies to interact with three types of partners: (1) all group members, (2) adult females, and (3) adult males. We found strong evidence that females who engaged more with other females in affiliative interactions and foraged in close proximity experienced increased survivorship. We found some weak evidence that females might also benefit from engaging in more support in agonistic contexts with other females. These benefits were evident in models that account for the females? rank and group size. Female interactions with all group members also increased survival, but the estimates of the effects were more uncertain. In interactions with adult males, only females who provided more grooming to males survived longer. The results presented here suggest that social integration may result in survival-related benefits. Females might enjoy these benefits through exchanging grooming for other currencies, such as coalitionary support or tolerance. dcterms:created: 2022-05-27T10:39:37Z Last-Modified: 2022-06-16T06:05:53Z dcterms:modified: 2022-06-16T06:05:53Z title: Social integration predicts survival in female white-faced capuchin monkeys xmpMM:DocumentID: xmp.id:a6503de7-bdb4-e74d-b7c0-e65a97574d48 Last-Save-Date: 2022-06-16T06:05:53Z pdf:docinfo:modified: 2022-06-16T06:05:53Z meta:save-date: 2022-06-16T06:05:53Z Content-Type: application/pdf X-Parsed-By: org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser creator: Kotrina Kajokaite, Andrew Whalen, Jeremy Koster, Susan Perry pdfaid:conformance: A dc:language: en-US access_permission:assemble_document: true xmpTPg:NPages: 9 pdf:charsPerPage: 5208 access_permission:extract_content: true access_permission:can_print: true pdf:docinfo:trapped: False xmpMM:DerivedFrom:InstanceID: xmp.iid:b38a348e-2e58-bf4d-8442-eaad678f8a26 access_permission:can_modify: true pdf:docinfo:created: 2022-05-27T10:39:37Z