扰动(地质)
生态学
人际关系
适应能力
环境资源管理
环境科学
生物
心理学
气候变化
社会心理学
古生物学
作者
Camille Testard,Chloe Shergold,Arianna Acevedo-Ithier,Jordan D. A. Hart,Antonia Bernau,Josué E. Negrón-Del Valle,Daniel Phillips,Marina M. Watowich,Juan Ignacio Sanguinetti-Scheck,Michael J. Montague,Noah Snyder‐Mackler,James P. Higham,Michael L. Platt,Lauren J. N. Brent
出处
期刊:Science
[American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)]
日期:2024-06-21
卷期号:384 (6702): 1330-1335
标识
DOI:10.1126/science.adk0606
摘要
Extreme weather events radically alter ecosystems. When ecological damage persists, selective pressures on individuals can change, leading to phenotypic adjustments. For group-living animals, social relationships may be a mechanism enabling adaptation to ecosystem disturbance. Yet whether such events alter selection on sociality and whether group-living animals can, as a result, adaptively change their social relationships remain untested. We leveraged 10 years of data collected on rhesus macaques before and after a category 4 hurricane caused persistent deforestation, exacerbating monkeys’ exposure to intense heat. In response, macaques demonstrated persistently increased tolerance and decreased aggression toward other monkeys, facilitating access to scarce shade critical for thermoregulation. Social tolerance predicted individual survival after the hurricane, but not before it, revealing a shift in the adaptive function of sociality.
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