Having BFFs helps female baboons live longer
July 2nd, 2010 - 1:49 pm ICT by ANIWashington, July 2 (ANI): A new study has found that female baboons that maintain closer ties with other members of their troop live substantially longer than do those whose social bonds are less stable.
The researchers say that the findings add to evidence in animals from mice to humans that social bonds have real adaptive value.
“Our results suggest that close, stable social relationships have significant reproductive benefits. The data add to a growing body of evidence from humans and other animals that females with a strong, supportive social network are healthier and have greater reproductive success,” said Joan Silk of the University of California, Los Angeles.
Silk said that she and her colleagues were surprised to discover that the effects are at least partially independent of a given female’s status in the group.
In other words, the benefits of social ties don’t just derive from greater competitive ability or greater access to resources for those of higher dominance rank.
Dorothy Cheney of the University of Pennsylvania said: “Given that high-ranking females have priority of access to food resources, one might have predicted that rank would be the primary factor influencing longevity.
“Our results indicate instead that the quality of a female’s social bonds with other females is more important, suggesting that subordinate females may be able to offset the competitive disadvantage of low rank through their social relationships,” Cheney added.
The quality and stability of baboon relationships trump quantity, the researchers said. Females who were able to maintain the same grooming partners from one year to the next lived longer and had more surviving offspring.
Baboons most often form close bonds with relatives, the researchers said, and the stability of those connections is partly a matter of luck since lions and leopards often prey upon baboons. But it appears that isn’t the whole story. The researchers found that 80 percent of females that switched close grooming partners from one year to the next did so despite that fact that their earlier companion was still in the group.
Silk and Cheney said they aren’t exactly sure how the relationships lead baboons to live longer lives, but it might have something to do with lower stress levels in those with dedicated grooming partners. It’s also possible that females with such networks are more likely to be resting and foraging near other animals, making them less vulnerable to predators.
The findings in baboons may lend humans some added insight into our own social lives, the researchers said.
Silk said “Having friends is important for us and for female baboons-and maybe for some of the same reasons. Our findings are strikingly similar to evidence from humans showing that social ties have important effects on our mental and physical health and our longevity. We suspect that the human motivation to form close and lasting friendships has a very long evolutionary history.”
The study has been reported online on July 1st in Current Biology, a Cell Press publication. (ANI)
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Tags: adaptive value, baboon, baboons, bffs, body of evidence, california los angeles, competitive disadvantage, food resources, humans and other animals, joan silk, leopards, longevity, matter of luck, reproductive success, social bonds, social relationships, social ties, supportive social network, university of california los angeles, university of pennsylvania