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201522May21:06

Spot­ted hye­nas show why Face­book works – befriend­ing is everything

Infor­ma­tion
pub­lished 22 May 2015 | mod­i­fied 22 May 2015
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Bond­ing with a friend of a friend is some­thing most humans grav­i­tate toward nat­u­rally, or at least Face­book likes to think so every time it sug­gests friends for you to “friend.”

Spotted hyena groupBut the spot­ted hyena seems to know the ben­e­fits of this type of social bond­ing instinc­tively, accord­ing to a new study from the National Insti­tute for Math­e­mat­i­cal and Bio­log­i­cal Syn­the­sis (NIM­BioS) that con­sid­ers the struc­tural fac­tors affect­ing the social net­work of these animals.

Researchers col­lected more than 55,000 obser­va­tions of social inter­ac­tions of spot­ted hye­nas over a 20 year period in Kenya, mak­ing this one of the largest to date of social net­work dynam­ics in any non-​human species. The find­ings are pub­lished online on 14 May in the jour­nal Ecol­ogy Let­ters.

They found that cohe­sive clus­ter­ing of the kind where an indi­vid­ual bonds with friends of friends, some­thing sci­en­tists call “tri­adic clo­sure,” was the most con­sis­tent fac­tor influ­enc­ing the long-​term dynam­ics of the social struc­ture of spot­ted hyenas.

Indi­vid­ual traits, such as sex and social rank, and envi­ron­men­tal effects, such as the amount of rain­fall and the abun­dance of prey, also mat­ter, but the abil­ity of indi­vid­u­als to form and main­tain social bonds in tri­ads was key, accord­ing to the study.

Cohe­sive clus­ters can facil­i­tate effi­cient coop­er­a­tion and hence max­i­mize fitness
Amiyaal Ilany, lead author, post­doc­toral fel­low, Uni­ver­sity of Pennsylvania »

[…] so our study shows that hye­nas exploit this advan­tage. Inter­est­ingly, clus­ter­ing is some­thing done in human soci­eties, from hunter-​gatherers to Face­book users,” explained Ilany, who con­ducted the research as a NIM­BioS post­doc­toral fellow.

Hye­nas, which can live up to 22 years, typ­i­cally live in large, sta­ble groups known as clans, which can com­prise more than 100 indi­vid­u­als. Socially sophis­ti­cated ani­mals, these preda­tors can dis­crim­i­nate mater­nal and pater­nal kin from unre­lated hye­nas and are selec­tive in their social choices, tend­ing to not form bonds with every hyena in the clan, rather pre­fer­ring the friends of their friends, the study found.

The study found that hye­nas fol­low a com­plex set of rules when mak­ing social deci­sions. Males fol­low rigid rules in form­ing bonds, whereas females tend to change their pref­er­ences over time. For exam­ple, a female might care about social rank at one time, but then later choose based on rain­fall amounts.

In spot­ted hye­nas, females are the dom­i­nant sex and so they can be very flex­i­ble in their social pref­er­ences. Females also remain in the same clan all their lives, so they may know the social envi­ron­ment bet­ter. In con­trast, males dis­perse to new clans after reach­ing puberty, and after they dis­perse they have vir­tu­ally no social con­trol because they are the low­est rank­ing indi­vid­u­als in the new clan, so we can spec­u­late that per­haps this is why they are obliged to fol­low stricter social rules,” said co-​author Kay Holekamp, a zool­o­gist from Michi­gan State University.

Know­ing why and how these ani­mals form last­ing rela­tion­ships can help sci­en­tists bet­ter under­stand coop­er­a­tion pat­terns and the con­se­quences of social­ity in other species.

The researchers used a new, more com­pre­hen­sive method than those used in ear­lier stud­ies, a type of math­e­mat­i­cal mod­el­ling typ­i­cally found in soci­ol­ogy, to arrive at their find­ings about the social world of the spot­ted hyena.

This more dynamic approach allowed the researchers to eval­u­ate the simul­ta­ne­ous effects of mul­ti­ple fac­tors — envi­ron­men­tal, indi­vid­ual, genetic and struc­tural — on net­work dynam­ics. It also gave the researchers a peek into how or why the social struc­ture changes over time and to iso­late the fac­tors that shape the struc­ture. The method rep­re­sents a major advance over meth­ods used in pre­vi­ous stud­ies of ani­mal social net­works where more sta­tic approaches have typ­i­cally been applied.


And besides great ‘befrien­ders’ spot­ted hyena are excel­lent prob­lem solvers as well:



More infor­ma­tion about the research con­ducted on spot­ted hyena in Kenya on Smith​son​ian​.com.


(Source: NIM­BioS press release, 15.05.2015; The Royal Soci­ety YouTube channel)


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