10 results on '"Huchard, Elise"'
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2. Stability and strength of male-female associations in a promiscuous primate society
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Baniel, Alice, Cowlishaw, Guy, and Huchard, Elise
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- 2016
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3. Molecular study of Mhc-DRB in wild chacma baboons reveals high variability and evidence for trans-species inheritance
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Huchard, Elise, Cowlishaw, Guy, Raymond, Michel, Weill, Mylene, and Knapp, Leslie A.
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- 2006
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4. MHC, mate choice and heterozygote advantage in a wild social primate.
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HUCHARD, ELISE, KNAPP, LESLIE A., WANG, JINLIANG, RAYMOND, MICHEL, and COWLISHAW, GUY
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GENETIC carriers , *MAJOR histocompatibility complex , *SEXUAL selection , *CHACMA baboon , *MICROSATELLITE repeats , *ANIMAL sexual behavior , *ANIMAL population genetics , *ANIMAL reproduction , *BIOLOGICAL divergence - Abstract
Preferences for mates carrying dissimilar genes at the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) may help animals increase offspring pathogen resistance or avoid inbreeding. Such preferences have been reported across a range of vertebrates, but have rarely been investigated in social species other than humans. We investigated mate choice and MHC dynamics in wild baboons ( Papio ursinus). MHC Class II DRB genes and 16 microsatellite loci were genotyped across six groups (199 individuals). Based on the survey of a key segment of the gene-rich MHC, we found no evidence of mate choice for MHC dissimilarity, diversity or rare MHC genotypes. First, MHC dissimilarity did not differ from random expectation either between parents of the same offspring or between immigrant males and females from the same troop. Second, female reproductive success was not influenced by MHC diversity or genotype frequency. Third, population genetic structure analysis revealed equally high genotypic differentiation among troops, and comparable excess heterozygosity within troops for juveniles, at both Mhc-DRB and neutral loci. Nevertheless, the age structure of Mhc-DRB heterozygosity suggested higher longevity for heterozygotes, which should favour preferences for MHC dissimilarity. We propose that high levels of within-group outbreeding, resulting from group-living and sex-biased dispersal, might weaken selection for MHC-disassortative mate choice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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5. Studying shape in sexual signals: the case of primate sexual swellings.
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Huchard, Elise, Benavides, Julio A., Setchell, Joanna M., Charpentier, Marie J. E., Alvergne, Alexandra, King, Andrew J., Knapp, Leslie A., Cowlishaw, Guy, and Raymond, Michel
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ANIMAL behavior ,PRIMATES ,PREDATORY animals ,CHACMA baboon ,ANIMAL communication ,SOCIOBIOLOGY - Abstract
Despite extensive research on animal signals, their shape has been largely overlooked compared to other components such as size or colour. This may represent a substantial gap in our understanding of animal communication, since shape perception is believed to influence various processes in behavioural ecology, from prey–predator interactions to mate recognition. The technical challenge of measuring shape may explain this bias. This study introduces a morphometric method for the analysis of shape in animal signals and applies it to the study of patterns of shape variation in a classical sexual signal: the sexual swellings of female primates. Using elliptic Fourier descriptors (EFDs), we derived quantitative estimates of the two-dimensional shapes of sexual swellings in two primate populations: wild chacma baboons ( Papio ursinus) from Namibia and captive mandrills ( Mandrillus sphinx) from Gabon. Despite intra-specific variability, the two species exhibited consistently different swelling shapes. Within species, our analysis further showed more variation in swelling shape between females than across consecutive oestrous cycles of the same female. Using human judges, we confirmed that individual shape differences were visually detectable within both species. Finally, the relationships between individual traits and swelling shape were investigated, revealing age-associated variation in swelling shape in both species. Our study illustrates the high potentialities of EFDs to analyse patterns of shape variation at various scales: not only between species but also between and within individuals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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6. Polymorphism, haplotype composition, and selection in the Mhc-DRB of wild baboons.
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Huchard, Elise, Weill, Mylene, Cowlishaw, Guy, Raymond, Michel, and Knapp, Leslie A.
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MAJOR histocompatibility complex , *IMMUNOGENETICS , *PRIMATES , *GENETIC polymorphisms , *CHACMA baboon , *BABOONS - Abstract
General patterns of organization in the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) have been successfully explained by the model of birth-and-death evolution, but understanding why certain MHC genes are maintained together into specific haplotypes remains challenging. The haplotype configurations of the functionally important class II DR region have been described in few primates and display important interspecific variability with respect to the extent of allelic variation, the number of loci and/or combinations of loci present. Understanding the evolutionary mechanisms driving such variation is conditional upon characterizing haplotypes in new species and identifying the selective pressures acting on haplotypes. This study explores the variability of haplotype configurations in the Mhc-DRB region (exon 2) for the first time in wild non-human primates, chacma baboons ( Papio ursinus). Paur-DRB haplotypes were characterized through segregation studies and linkage disequilibrium. 23 Paur-DRB sequences and 15 haplotype configurations were identified in 199 animals. The Paur-DRB exon 2 is shown to be subjected to intense positive selection and frequent recombination. An approach recently developed for human vaccine studies was used to classify Paur-DRB sequences into supertypes, based on the physico-chemical properties of amino acids that are positively selected, thus most probably involved in antigen recognition. Sequences grouped into the same supertype (thus presumably sharing antigen-binding affinities) are non-randomly distributed within haplotypes, leading to an increased individual diversity of supertypes. Our results suggest that selection favoring haplotypes with complementary sets of DRB supertypes shapes functionally tuned haplotypes in this natural baboon population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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7. Stable isotopes reveal the effects of maternal rank and infant age on weaning dynamics in wild chacma baboons.
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Carboni, Silvia, Dezeure, Jules, Cowlishaw, Guy, Huchard, Elise, and Marshall, Harry H.
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COMPOSITION of breast milk , *INFANT weaning , *STABLE isotopes , *HAIR analysis , *BABOONS , *STABLE isotope analysis , *NITROGEN isotopes - Abstract
Maternal strategies reflect the trade-off between offspring needs and maternal ability to invest, a concept described by the evolutionary theory of parent–offspring conflict. In mammals this conflict has often been investigated by studying weaning, the transition from maternal milk consumption to dietary independence. An investigation of individual variation in weaning can provide information on the adaptive significance of maternal strategies in relation to social and biological variables. We analysed stable nitrogen isotopes of hair samples collected from 22 mother–infant dyads in a wild population of chacma baboons, Papio ursinus , in conjunction with behavioural data on suckling, to explore the temporal dynamics of weaning, as well as the extent and determinants of individual variation in these dynamics. The weaning pattern suggested by isotope values and behavioural data were congruent. The difference between infant and mother stable nitrogen isotope values decreased faster with age in infants of low-ranking mothers, which suggests a faster progression towards weaning, perhaps due to subordinate females experiencing lower resource availability and so being less able to bear the costs of lactation over prolonged periods. Additionally, within-infant variation in stable nitrogen isotope values showed an increase with age (which was not detectable between infants), potentially highlighting the nutritional costs that weaning imposes on offspring. Our combination of isotope analysis and behavioural data from a wild population provides insight into the evolution of maternal strategies. In particular, it suggests that the quantity of care a mother can provide is affected by her rank, with subordinate females possibly not able to lactate for as long and perhaps benefiting from weaning earlier. • Time to weaning may depend on maternal and offspring characteristics • Stable isotope signatures can characterize the weaning process • In baboons, offspring of low-ranked mothers moved towards weaning more quickly • Stable isotope analysis may show signs of nutritional stress in weaning infants • Social environment can influence the weaning process and maternal strategies [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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8. A rule-of-thumb based on social affiliation explains collective movements in desert baboons
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King, Andrew J., Sueur, Cedric, Huchard, Elise, and Cowlishaw, Guy
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CHACMA baboon behavior , *AFFILIATION (Psychology) in animals , *BABOON behavior , *ANIMAL social behavior , *BIOLOGICAL systems , *DECISION making in animals , *ANIMAL communication - Abstract
Animals living in groups will profit most from sociality if they coordinate the timing and nature of their activities. Self-organizing mechanisms can underlie coordination in large animal groups such as insect colonies or fish schools, but to what degree these mechanisms operate in socially complex species that live in small stable groups is not well known. We therefore examined the collective departure of wild chacma baboons, Papio ursinus, from their sleeping sites. First, in line with previous observations, the departure process appeared to be coordinated through the cue of individuals ‘moving off’, with no role for specific vocal or visual signalling. Second, we employed network analyses to explore how interindividual relationships influenced departure patterns, and found that a local rule, to follow the movements of those baboons with whom they shared a close social affiliation, determined when the baboon group departed. Finally, using an agent-based model, we were able to simulate mathematically the observed patterns of collective movements based upon the emergent rule that we identified. Our study adds weight to the idea that social complexity does not necessitate cognitive complexity in the decision-making process, consistent with heuristic decision-making perspectives studied by cognitive psychologists and researchers studying self-organization in biological systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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9. Dominance and Affiliation Mediate Despotism in a Social Primate
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King, Andrew J., Douglas, Caitlin M.S., Huchard, Elise, Isaac, Nick J.B., and Cowlishaw, Guy
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SOCIAL hierarchy in animals , *ANIMAL societies , *DESPOTISM , *CHACMA baboon , *PRIMATE behavior , *GROUP decision making - Abstract
Summary: Group-living animals routinely have to reach a consensus decision and choose between mutually exclusive actions in order to coordinate their activities and benefit from sociality . Theoretical models predict “democratic” rather than “despotic” decisions to be widespread in social vertebrates, because they result in lower “consensus costs”—the costs of an individual foregoing its optimal action to comply with the decision—for the group as a whole . Yet, quantification of consensus costs is entirely lacking, and empirical observations provide strong support for the occurrence of both democratic and despotic decisions in nature . We conducted a foraging experiment on a wild social primate (chacma baboons, Papio ursinus) in order to gain new insights into despotic group decision making. The results show that group foraging decisions were consistently led by the individual who acquired the greatest benefits from those decisions, namely the dominant male. Subordinate group members followed the leader despite considerable consensus costs. Follower behavior was mediated by social ties to the leader, and where these ties were weaker, group fission was more likely to occur. Our findings highlight the importance of leader incentives and social relationships in group decision-making processes and the emergence of despotism. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2008
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10. Friend or foe: reconciliation between males and females in wild chacma baboons.
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Webb, Christine E., Baniel, Alice, Cowlishaw, Guy, and Huchard, Elise
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BISEXUAL adoption , *ANIMAL aggression , *HETEROSEXUAL communication , *INVESTMENTS , *CHACMA baboon - Abstract
Male aggression towards females is a common and often costly occurrence in species that live in bisexual groups. But preferential heterosexual relationships are also known to confer numerous fitness advantages to both sexes—making it of interest to explore how aggression is managed among male–female dyads through strategies like reconciliation (i.e. postconflict affiliative reunions between former opponents). In this study, we build on the traditional postconflict matched-control (PC-MC), time rule and rate methods to validate a novel methodological approach that tests for the presence and form of reconciliation between male and female wild chacma baboons, Papio ursinus. We show that heterosexual opponents exhibit friendly postconflict reunions, further demonstrating that reconciliation occurs almost exclusively between males and pregnant/lactating females who form tight social bonds. Such 'friendships' represent stable associations offering proximate and ultimate benefits to both parties—mainly improving (future) offspring survival. This aligns our findings with the 'valuable relationship hypothesis', which predicts rates of reconciliation to increase with the fitness consequences of the opponents' bond. Moreover, patterns concerning the initiative to reconcile reveal that males are as likely as females to initiate reconciliation, suggesting that males play a heretofore underappreciated role in maintaining heterosexual friendships. Beyond proposing a multivariate methodological technique applicable to other long-term observational data sets, the present research illuminates how male–female aggression in promiscuous societies may be mitigated via relationship repair strategies like reconciliation, the balance in those efforts between partners shedding new light on the mutual investment in such bonds. • Heterosexual opponents reconcile after aggression in a promiscuous primate society. • Friends but not nonfriends reconcile, backing the valuable relationship hypothesis. • Males and their female friends are equally likely to initiate reconciliation. • Males may play an underappreciated role in maintaining heterosexual friendships. • We present a novel method to study reconciliation using observational data sets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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