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Published byClaribel Eaton Modified over 5 years ago
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Wild Vervet Monkeys Trade Tolerance and Specific Coalitionary Support for Grooming in Experimentally Induced Conflicts Christèle Borgeaud, Redouan Bshary Current Biology Volume 25, Issue 22, Pages (November 2015) DOI: /j.cub Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ltd Terms and Conditions
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Figure 1 Dominants Trade Short-Term Tolerance for Grooming
Representation of bondedness in all three grooming situations: NoG, the dominant did not experience any grooming in the last 60 min; DG, the dominant was groomed by a third party; PG, the partner groomed the dominant. Thick horizontal lines show medians, boxes show quartiles, and whiskers represent the highest and lowest values that are not outliers. Outliers are represented by circles beyond the whiskers; extreme values are represented by asterisks. Current Biology , DOI: ( /j.cub ) Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ltd Terms and Conditions
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Figure 2 Coalitionary Support
Proportion of support toward individuals according to recent grooming events and rank. We made a distinction between the whole dataset and the data subset that involved coalitionary support against a lower-ranking third party. Note that these are raw data with interdependencies due to repeated observations of individuals and pairs. Current Biology , DOI: ( /j.cub ) Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ltd Terms and Conditions
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