Key Words: crowding, infanticide, resource defence, territoriality, langur, Presbytis, Rattus

Population density, social pathology, and behavioral ecology

Jim Moore
Anthropology Dept 0532
UCSD
La Jolla CA 92093-0532
jjmoore@ucsd.edu

Cite as:
Moore, J. (1999). Population density, social pathology, and behavioral ecology. Primates. 40: 5-26.

Back to list of publications

Figures and tables will open in new windows; just close to return to text.


"At a population this dense, man would be extinct".
Undergraduate paper discussing Calhoun's rat experiments, Stanford University, 1976

Introduction

One criticism of sociobiology has been that advocates can "explain anything" by recourse to a combination of adaptive story and, when a suitable story cannot be found, dismissing the observation as nonadaptive or pathological "noise". Other critics have argued that behaviors such as infanticide by males, which have generated elaborate adaptive stories, are in fact pathological and so not in need of evolutionary explanation (Bartlett et al., 1993). While few behavioral ecologists would argue that all behavior is adaptive, it is clear that the importance of a socioecological perspective for helping understand the world is weakened to the degree that large classes of "pathological" behavior either must be ignored or remain mysterious to an adaptive framework.

In this paper I address two classic examples of "social pathology"--apparently maladaptive social behavior--and suggest that they can be understood to a great extent (perhaps entirely) when viewed from the perspective of competitive individuals acting according to the principles of economic defendability models. These are based on the simple assumption that territorial or possessive behavior is favored only when benefits exceed costs; while initially sounding trivial, this perspective challenges widespread typological thinking--"species X is/is not territorial" gives way to "individuals of species X should be territorial under some conditions and not others". Such models have had considerable success at explaining variation in territorial behavior of birds (Myers et al., 1981) and may be applied to long-standing questions concerning mammalian social structure (e.g. Brotherton & Manser, 1997). One of the demographic factors known to influence the cost of resource defense is the intruder pressure (normally a function of resource density, with resource-rich habitats supporting and attracting more intruders). At high intruder pressures, resource defense no longer pays off; the defender would expend more energy in agonism than exclusive possession of the resource is worth (Myers et al., 1981; Krebs & Davies, 1987).

Such a perspective immediately reveals the fact that linear regressions may be inappropriate tests for the relationship between behavioral and ecological or demographic variables. For example, the relationship between age and dominance rank among male macaques is predicted to be curvilinear; males are likely to start low ranking, rise during their prime, and fall in rank as they senesce. As Sprague (1998) points out, given such an inverted-U relationship, a linear regression of rank on age may find a positive, negative or no relationship depending on the age composition of the sample. A similar inverted-U pattern has been reported with respect to territoriality and intruder pressure: at low pressures defensive boundary patrols are largely wasted energy, at intermediate pressures territoriality pays off, and at high intruder pressure defenders are swamped (Myers et al., 1981).

The first example comes from the work of John Calhoun on captive rats (Rattus norvegicus, Osborne-Mendel strain). He created high-density populations in which aggression, infanticide, and infant neglect became rampant; these findings were reported in an influential Scientific American article entitled "Population density and social pathology" (1962a). Previously unreported patterns in the data, discussed below, indicate that at least some of the supposedly maladaptive behavior made good adaptive sense.

The second example is that of infanticide among langur monkeys (Presbytis entellus). In this case, the killing of infants by male langurs has been interpreted by some as pathological (resulting from high population density) and others as adaptive (evolved via sexual selection); proponents of the adaptive interpretation have cited the absence of a correlation between population density and infanticide as a fatal flaw in the pathology hypothesis (see Hrdy et al., 1995 and Sussman et al., 1995). However, they have had difficulty explaining intersite variation in the expression of infanticide, a problem cited by proponents of the pathology hypothesis. These conflicting interpretations are to considerable degree resolved by application of an economic defendability model, which explicitly rejects the underlying hypothesis of both camps that population density should exert linear effects on behavior.

The behavioral variation observed in these cases, which has been described as pathological by some and strategic by others, may be neither; both of those terms suggest that the behavior is somehow "located" within the individual--that is, the individual is maladjusted, or the behavior is "genetically specified" in some detail within the individual's genome (e.g., Hausfater, 1984). This may be a misleading way to view both situations. Instead, these apparently complex regularities in behavior can be derived from the interaction of a few simple tendencies (e.g., hostility toward strange males) with predictable demographic settings, rather than requiring specified mental rules or modules (cf. Altmann & Altmann, 1979). Particular sociodemographic settings reliably can lead to behavioral outcomes which are adaptive and thus seem "genetic" because of the consistency with which they appear, without in fact being genetically specified per se (Elman et al., 1996; Hill, 1999).

Both of these classic examples deal with the supposedly negative effects of high population density upon animals. Interest in the evils of crowding exploded during the mid- to late-1960s, in a climate conditioned by group selection theory, the 'population bomb', and a dawning awareness of ecological disaster looming ahead. The University of California's on-line library catalog (MELVYL) lists two books with subject heading "crowding" published between 1960 and 1970; between 1970 and 1980, there are 38. During the early 1970s, population density was seen as threatening our very existence (as illustrated oxymoronically by the epigram above). This interest soon collapsed (only 7 books since 1990), in part because it became clear that crowding per se did not automatically lead to pathological behavior (Freedman, 1975). While population density seemed intuitively related to criminal behavior in humans and agonism in nonhumans, the relationship was neither deterministic nor systematic and so population density, as an explanatory variable, fell out of favor.

It was not altogether wrong, however. Among nonhuman primates, per-individual rates of aggression consistently rise with crowding, though this increase is not uniform across types of aggression and may not be statistically significant in individual studies (Aureli et al., 1995; Judge & de Waal, 1993; Judge & de Waal, 1997). Sometimes it is not explicitly acknowledged, though present in the data (e.g., Anderson et al., 1977). Furthermore, species differences in the relationship between agonistic behavior and population density may have important implications for the evolution of social systems as well as for conservation planners (Yamagiwa, 1999). It is now clear that we cannot solve modern urban and ecological problems by merely reducing the density at which we live, but this should not be taken as evidence that population density does not contribute, in an adaptively comprehensible way, to the expression of agonistic behavior--and, through behavior, to social organization.

I: Rats and social pathology

Calhoun (1962a) was perhaps the seminal work suggesting a link between crowding and social pathology. He populated a room subdivided into four contiguous pens with rats and provided them with unlimited food and water; after a year, their density was high and he reported infanticide, cannibalism, homosexuality, and the formation of a "behavioral sink": the majority of the rats would congregate to feed within a small subsection of the room, increasing their real density far above that imposed by the distribution of food or size of the enclosure, and seemingly exacerbating the social pressure of numbers. The analogy with humans apparently voluntarily flocking to decaying inner cities despite high crime rates and lower quality of life compared to rural areas was compelling and the paper widely cited. Calhoun himself promoted the analogy in papers such as "Plight of the Ik and Kaiadilt is seen as a chilling possible end for Man" (1972).

While some (e.g. Hrdy 1977: 9) noted that individual rats in what Calhoun called "breeder pens" were doing reasonably well, simply pointing out that some individuals were better able to cope with crumbling society did not alter the general view that crowding induced pathological behavior. The image was one of a few tough individuals getting by as the world degenerated, and the conclusion that pathological behavior was rampant overall was unchallenged. I show here that there was a great deal of adaptive patterning to the supposedly pathological distribution of rats in the room. Whether other facets of the rats' behavior (e.g., the co-feeding that defined the "behavioral sink") can be interpreted adaptively is beyond the scope of this analysis, but it would be worth investigation.

Methods
There have been few individually-oriented studies of the behavioral ecology of wild rats; the following brief natural history background is taken from Calhoun (1963a) and Barnett (1975). Wild R. norvegicus are terrestrial and live in colonies which can number in the hundreds. Within colonies, ground burrows are shared by up to about six reproductive females (often matrilineally related), each with a separate nest chamber. A burrow may or may not have one or more males associated with it and attempting (with variable success) to restrict mating access of other males to resident females. Dominance relationships among males are established at about puberty through fighting and tend to be stable thereafter; alpha males tend to be larger as adults, and hierarchies among non-alpha males are indistinct. Mortality rates are higher for subordinates of both sexes, apparently involving adrenal hyperplasia in addition to overt wounding or resource exclusion. They are multi-mount ejaculators. Males sometimes compete over receptive females, but often large groups of males will copulate sequentially with a single female, showing little if any overt competition. Nevertheless, dominant males in captivity achieve more ejaculations and continue mating with individual females longer, thereby increasing the length of postcopulatory intervals following their ejaculations; both factors contribute to fertilization suggesting that male rank is correlated with reproductive success (Thor & Carr, 1979). It is notable that conception is unlikely if the intercopulatory interval is too short; hence conceptions may be less likely under group mating conditions. Inter-colony relationships vary from tolerance to hostility. Dispersal (both within and between colonies) is male-biased, but the levels of social organization appear more permeable than among most primates and membership in a burrow or colony is flexible.

Calhoun's experimental procedures are described in several papers (Calhoun, 1962a, 1962b, 1963b) and these should be consulted for details. He constructed 10 by 14-foot rooms divided into four sections, with bridges connecting sections 1-2, 2-3, and 3-4; although physically arranged in a square, topologically this amounts to a line of connected rooms (Figure 1). Each elevated "burrow" contained five nest boxes, reached via a ramp. The burrow in Pen 4 was elevated the most; Pen 3 intermediate, and Pens 1 and 2 the least. Calhoun (1962a) states that the rats prefer lower burrows; he provides no supporting evidence but this preference would be consistent with their natural habitat. Burrow heights are not given in 1962a; Calhoun 1962b describes what seems to be a very similar experiment in which two burrows were elevated 3 feet and two were elevated 6 feet; the discrepancy is unexplained. Note that Pens 2 and 3 can be entered from two directions. Consequently, Pen 1 is likely to be most preferred (low burrow and single entry) and Pen 2 preferred over Pen 3 (lower burrow, both have double entries). The preference ranking for Pen 4 cannot be predicted without knowing which is more important to rats, burrow height or single entry; it is presumably least preferred on its own merits (burrow height) but equivalent to Pen 1 in ease of defense (highly relevant for the economic defendability interpretation presented here).

Three replicates were run in two series, for a total of 6 independent experiments. Each room was seeded with equal numbers of recently-weaned male and female rats (total of 32 in Series I and 56 in Series II). They were provided unlimited food and water and allowed to breed freely for 12 months, by which time "all the populations had multiplied and each comprised 80 adults"; thereafter weaned young were cropped to keep populations constant (Calhoun, 1962a:139; while it seems unlikely that all six replicates would have numbered exactly 80 before cropping, I assume at least subsequently they were kept at 80 by cropping). It should be noted that there are discrepancies between the design described in Calhoun (1962b) and that of Calhoun (1962a); it is not clear if they describe the same set of replicates and my analysis is restricted to that described in the Scientific American paper; data required for this analysis cannot be extracted from Calhoun (1962b).

Calhoun presents data on usage of each pen during the 13th month in the form of bar graphs showing the per cent of animals sleeping, eating and drinking in each pen; only the sleeping data are broken down by sex. Using this figure (bars measured to nearest 0.05 mm with calipers) and the total of 80 animals per room, I calculated numbers of males and females sleeping in each pen, as well as the overall sex ratio in each of the six rooms (Table 1). All analyses were done with StatView 4.5 (Macintosh).

Results
Males distributed themselves nonrandomly across the pens (Fig. 2a; Kruskal-Wallis test, N=24, H=7.49, p < 0.06); they tended to concentrate in Pens 2 and 3 (each of which had two entrances), with Pen 1 showing markedly more variation in occupancy than the other pens. Calhoun notes that dominant males were sometimes able to monopolize the end pens (1 and 4), forcing subordinate males into the two central pens. This is the basis for Hrdy's comment that some rats did well for themselves; as discussed above, while important one could justifiably point out that behavioral ecological theory is contributing little to our understanding if we are left with "some rats are dominant and they have an easier time of it with one entrance to guard". Ideally, we should like to understand why the pattern for Pen 1 is so different from that of Pen 4, and why in Pen 1, two replicates (marked * and # in Figure 2) are such outliers with respect to the other four.

While the population density is constant across the rooms, the density of competing males (as measured by the sex ratio) varies from 0.41 to 0.70. I refer to this density of competing individuals as the intruder pressure. The six replicates are divided into "high", "medium" and "low" intruder pressure conditions (2 rooms each); these are ordinal rankings and I know of no way to relate these intruder pressures to realistic ones experienced in the wild. Figure 2b illustrates the difference between the pen sex ratio and the overall room sex ratio, for each of the six replicates; points representing pens within the same room are connected. The two rooms with the lowest overall sex ratio (Series 2, rooms I and II) had the fewest males sleeping in Pen 1, and intermediate numbers in Pen 4. The two rooms with the highest sex ratios (Series 1, rooms I and II) had the most males sleeping in Pen 4, and intermediate numbers in Pen 1; precisely the opposite pattern. Finally, the two rooms with intermediate male densities show the greatest variation across pens, with males strongly concentrated in Pen 1 and Pen 4 having 1 and 0 males. Calhoun notes that in the 0-male case, a particularly dominant male was able to establish himself at the base of the bridge connecting pens 2 and 3, thereby monopolizing both pens 3 and 4 (and a total of 17 females).

DISCUSSION
I suggest the following explanation for this strong patterning in supposedly "pathological" behavior: At low intruder pressure, the males with greatest Resource Holding Power (RHP) were able to monopolize the preferred Pen 1; less dominant males "filled in" Pens 4, 3, and 2. Note that this ordering is the inverse of their quality as measured by burrow height; the preferred Pen 2 would be hardest to monopolize and Pen 4, lowest quality and easily defended, would be easiest and so held by second-tier males.

At high intruder pressure, no males could monopolize any pens and the pen sex ratio remained close to the overall room sex ratio. Finally, at intermediate intruder pressures even the highest-RHP males could not monopolize the most preferred Pen 1; however, they were able to control access to Pen 4 and the combination of controlled access, low habitat quality and high RHP permitted them to maintain absolute monopolies. Second-tier males were not able to control access to Pen 1 at all, leading to its invasion as the highest-quality pen available.

I have not attempted to address other aspects of the rats' behavior, such as the development of a behavioral sink (as defined above) or infant killing and cannibalism (though these later behaviors may be readily explicable as male competitive tactics; see below). My goal has been to demonstrate that even in the archetypal case of "crowding causes social pathology", a behavioral ecological approach that considers actors as strategic and tactical individuals operating on economic defendability principles can account for detailed variation in behavior and resulting demographics.

The insight that intruder pressure can make sense of apparent "social pathology" can be applied to another case, that of infanticide by male langur monkeys (Presbytis entellus).

II. Langurs and "pathological" infanticide.

When male langur monkeys join a troop (especially when this is done as an abrupt replacement of a single troop male), they sometimes kill young infants present (Hausfater & Hrdy, 1984; Sugiyama, 1965). The stark contrast between this behavior and langurs' normally more peaceful behavior led some to suspect that infanticide represented a pathological or dysgenic response to "crowding" (it is not always clear in the literature whether a given author uses this term to refer to high population density, or the mechanism by which that density is achieved), while others see the behavior as a sexually-selected adaptation. The debate continues 30 years later (Hrdy et al., 1995; Sterck, 1998, 1999; Sussman et al., 1995) despite reports of infanticide from uncrowded and undisturbed sites (e.g., Borries, 1997; Newton, 1986). It is worth noting that Hrdy, who formalized the sexual selection hypothesis, began her research on langur infanticide as an explicit follow-up to Calhoun's rat work, attempting to document a crowding pathology in the wild (Hrdy, 1977: 8-10).

One of the chief puzzles concerning langur infanticide is its variable occurrence; at some sites it seems to occur regularly and at others, never (Curtin & Dolhinow, 1978; Borries, 1997, suggests that with enough time it will be observed at most or all sites). In the absence of a plausible adaptive explanation for this variation, social pathology remains for some a viable alternative. In a series of publications, Newton (Newton, 1986; 1987; 1988; Newton & Dunbar, 1994) attempted to explain the distribution of infanticide, and concluded that the behavior was not linearly related to population density/crowding, but instead was a function of the proportion of single-male troops in a population. Where troops contain only a single male, changes in male membership are almost inevitably abrupt and thus favor sexually selected infanticide.

The problem with this explanation is that it begs the question, why are some populations composed predominantly of single-male troops? Without an answer, one could readily argue that multi-male troops are "normal" for this species and thus single-male organization is atypical and "pathological". The question of what determines the number of males per troop in primates is of general interest; Newton & Dunbar (1994) argue that it is not population density, climate, predation risk, or differential male mortality, but instead is most likely a function of numbers of adult females per troop, both within P. entellus and across colobines (see Discussion for additional alternative hypotheses). Presumably, the number of adult females per troop is determined by the variables that determine group size: Newton & Dunbar suggest that small groups are favored by low predation risk and small or abundant food patches. Treves & Chapman (1996) found that conspecific threat (measured by the ratio of extragroup males:bisexual groups) explains variance in group size better than either predation threat or resource defense; however, intersite variance in that ratio remains unexplained.

Newton & Dunbar's hypothesis hinges upon the existence of a strong correlation between the number of adult males and adult females per troop. While Newton (1988) reports such a correlation within P. entellus, it appears to be highly sensitive to methodological decisions and I find limited evidence to support it. Instead, the number of males per troop within this species, and hence the incidence of infanticide, appears to be a function of population density.

Methods
Most populations of langurs have had some exposure to humans and are not totally wild on first contact; combined with being large, semiterrestrial monkeys this makes them ideal for censusing and there is a great deal of demographic data available for them (more than 350 groups from at least 25 study sites). A trained observer can accurately count several groups per day under some conditions. One problem with this is that sometimes what is (accurately) counted is not a stable "group" in a socioecological sense, but an unstable phase resulting from e.g. death of a male resulting in no-male troops, or male incursions resulting in temporarily high adult sex ratios. Such incursions can last from hours to months (personal observations; Laws & Vonder Haar Laws, 1984), and such longer "incursions" should not be dismissed as temporary--but cannot be distinguished from brief ones in a cross-sectional census survey. Rather than discount all such survey data, I have taken a statistical approach and excluded only extreme outliers from adult male/troop analyses (Table 2).


Table 2: Adult males per langur troop
# males	# troops
0	2
1	172
2	24
3	15
4	6
5	3
6	4
7	4
8	2
9	4
....
24	1	(Vogel, 1973)
40	1	(Moore, 1985)
	238 troops
Mean = 1.992, SD = 3.3, range 0-40. One of the zero-male troops was known to have been single-male immediately prior to the census (male was killed by a truck; Moore, unpublished). The 24- and 40-male troops probably represent temporary incursions.

In addition, the data are of variable quality and there are some ambiguities in the secondary literature that can further confuse comparative analysis. Newton (1988) attempted, with my collaboration, to sort out some of these problems and his Table I is the starting point for the present analysis. However, most of our collaboration dealt with population density and proportion of unimale troops at each site; my interpretation of data on troop size and structure differs from his in several cases (Table 3). Appendix I explains the discrepancies between these data sets and those recently employed by Srivastava & Dunbar (1996) and Treves & Chapman (1996). Relevant data from five sites have been published since Newton (1988): Ambagarh and Jaipur Residential (Mathur & Manohar, 1992; incorrectly cited as "Reena & Ram" -- the authors' first names -- by Newton & Dunbar, 1994), Mundanthurai (Ross, 1993), Sariska (Ross & Srivastava, 1994), and Ramnagar (Borries, 1997; Koenig et al. 1997). I have visited both Jaipur sites with the authors and have accepted their data as given. For the other sites I contacted the primary authors directly for clarification of methodological issues; in the case of Mundanthurai, this led to significant reconsideration of the published data (below). For Polonnaruwa, one of the "older" sites, the discrepancies in the literature are large and are discussed below. All analyses have been carried out using Newton's data (as shown in Table 3) as well, and significant differences are noted. All analyses were done with StatView 4.5 (Macintosh).

Polonnaruwa
Population density estimates for this site in the secondary literature range from about 40/km2 (Oppenheimer, 1977) to up to 200/km2 (Hrdy, 1977), all based on the work of Ripley (Ripley, 1965; 1967; 1979 and various personal communications cited by secondary authors). Newton and I attempted to reconcile these, arriving at what was essentially a compromise density of 109/km2 and 27% unimale troops (based on a personal communication cited in Hrdy, 1977, with N = 11 troops; Newton, 1988). The site density subsequently has been reported as about 60/km2 by Newton & Dunbar (1994: Figure 11.5; it is 109 in Figure 11.3) and 109/km2 by Srivastava & Dunbar (1996); in each case, the density used is that which better supports the argument being made.

In her text, Ripley writes that "1 square mile of dry-zone forest can support about five to seven troops with an average of twenty-five members each" (1967: 241), which works out to 57.9/km2. However, elsewhere she estimates a biomass of about 12 kg/ha (1979; based on Hladik, 1975, who worked at the same site at about the same time and used Ripley's ranging data for his analyses). At an average weight of 7.4 kg/monkey (based on troop compositions in Ripley 1965 and weights from Roonwal, 1981) this works out to 160 monkeys/km2. Note that if Ripley initially confused miles and kilometers, 5-7 troops of 25 each would be about 150 monkeys/km2, in good agreement with the biomass estimate. Which is correct? Rough calculations based on her map (1967, Fig. 1) yield a density estimate for the four troops shown of about 154 monkeys/km2; analogous calculations from Hladik's Fig. 2 yield 169/km2. Finally, Hladik (1977) notes that both langur species at Polonnaruwa occur at similar density, "(about two animals per hectare), with biomasses of 10 to 15 kg per ha in maximum density locations" (p. 346); while 2/ha would be 200/km2, his biomass estimate suggests an overall figure under 150/km2 -- but well over 60/km2.

The conclusion seems inescapable that Ripley consistently confused miles with kilometers in reporting population density, and the true figure is likely close to 130-160/km2. I use 145/km2 in this paper; overall conclusions are not materially affected if the earlier compromise figure of 109/km2 is used.

Newton's figure of 6.3 AM/troop is based on the average of four troops listed in Moore (1985). In the course of re-examining Ripley's publications I noticed apparent discrepancies in the reports (Table 4). Moore's 1985 figures were based on Table 11 in Ripley (1965), with troop B1 adjusted for 2 subadult males as indicated in her Table 6. Because age breakdowns are not given for troops B and C1, presence of subadult males cannot be checked for them; furthermore, that would not explain the discrepancy between her Tables 10 and 11 (which are consistent regarding inclusion of subadults with respect to troop B1). B1 was formed when a subgroup left troop B; if the 13 males includes subadults then the numbers are at least closer to matching (13-4 is closer to the c. 6 of Ripley, 1967, than is 13-2). Noting that 13 adult males/troop would be > 3 SD from the mean (Table 2), I have used the figures from Ripley (1967) here on the assumption that most or all of the discrepancy is due to (possibly inconsistent) inclusion of subadult males.


Table 4: Males per troop at Polonnaruwa
Troop Moore (1985) Ripley (1967) Ripley (1965: Table 10) Ripley (1965: Table 11)
B1 2 2 4 4
A 3 3 3 3
C1 7 c. 4 c. 4 7
B 13 c. 6 c. 6 13

Mundanthurai Ross (1993) estimates a population density of 47.5/km2 with 25% of 4 troops unimale (the one unimale troop experienced a takeover with infanticide during her study, and was multimale when she left). Ross worked at Mundanthurai for only 28 days. Her density estimate is based on a complete count of troops in her study area of about 4km2, which was on the edge of a small village into which two troops regularly entered (1993; personal communication). Her impression is that P. entellus density was lower outside her immediate study zone; further into the Park they are replaced by P. johnii, and further outside the Park habitat is unsuitable for langurs (personal communication). Thus the density of 47.5/km2 is based on a one-month study, in a steep ecotone at the edge of a village. Based on population density figures from Mt. Abu (density twice as high within town as in the surrounding forest; Moore, 1985) it seems very likely that the "true" density at Mundanthurai is lower, by an amount difficult to estimate. Analyses of population density effects were carried out both with and without inclusion of this site.

Relevant analyses are based on numbers of adult females in troops rather than total troop size because (1) females are thought to be the ecological 'decision makers' among primates; (2) immatures probably do not make independent decisions about group membership; (3) demographic variables including birth seasons and infanticide can result in greater stochastic variation in number of immatures (N= 234 troops, CV for adult females = 63.7; immatures, 80.7); and (4) male decisions to join a troop are more likely to be a function of number of adult females, than of numbers of immatures (cf. Newton & Dunbar, 1994).

Results
While the number of adult males per troop (AM/t) is correlated with the number of adult females per troop (Newton & Dunbar, 1994) the relationship explains very little of the variance (Figure 3a; R2 < 0.02). Furthermore (and contra Newton & Dunbar, 1994), the relationship is unrelated to intersite differences (Figure 3b; arbitrarily excluding the two 30+-female sites changes the slope to +0.081, R2 = 0.081, P = 0.19). The difference in our results is probably due to his inclusion of troops with anomalously large number of males at several sites, thus artificially inflating site means. These figures show site means calculated with outliers excluded (as per Appendix and above); including the outliers but using site medians rather than means does not change the overall result (Y= 2.18 - 0.01X, R2 = 0.004, p = 0.76, N = 24). The proportion of one-male troops at a site is similarly unrelated to average number of females per troop (Y = 46.03 + 0.72X, R2 = 0.026, p = 0.442, N = 25).

While male membership in langur troops is unrelated to the number of females per troop across sites, both the number of adult males per troop (AM/t) and the proportion of single-male troops at a site are related to population density, in a nonlinear fashion (Figure 4a, b). There is no linear relationship between the variables (e.g., proportion single-male troops: Y = 56.58 - 0.026X; R2 = 0.001, P = 0.89).


FIGURE 4 LEGEND:
Troop composition and population density: Mundanthurai (shaded, with arrow) is excluded from analysis (see text). Arrow indicates direction of probable "true" location of the point. Two Kanha studies connected by vertical line, shaded point is Kankane (1980), not included in analysis. (4a): Adult males per troop. Y = 3.16 - 0.06X + 0.0004X2; R2 = 0.26, p = 0.053, N = 23 (with Mundanthurai included, R2 = 0.12 and p = 0.28; Newton data, R2 = 0.06, p = 0.53, N = 24). (4b): Per cent single-male troops. Y = 35.76 + 1.33X - 0.01X2; R2 = 0.21, p = 0.097, N = 23 (with Mundanthurai included, R2 = 0.16 and p = 0.171, N = 24; Newton data, R2 = 0.12 and p = 0.26, N = 24). For 3 sites indicated by "?" and site initial in (4b), infanticide is strongly suspected but unconfirmed/described: Abu forest--stalking attacks by invading males and infant disappearance, but actual wounding not observed (Moore, unpublished); Ranthambhore--forest guards reported dead infants in range of a recently-invaded troop, subsequent census consistent (Moore, unpublished); Polonnaruwa--Ripley (1980: 374) states that at Polonnaruwa "troop takeovers (accompanied by infant mortality and ouster of males into mostly male groups) ... [occurs] ... (Ripley, in preparation)", but I have not found further description.

In principle the basis for this relationship could lie in general ecological variables (food distribution in space and time, predation, etc.). If so, one would expect that both the number of adult females per troop and the total size of male bands would correlate similarly with population density. While both show such a trend, it is strong only for males per male band--probably reflecting the greater numbers of extra-group males at predominantly single-male sites, though this may merit further investigation (Figure 5a, b; medians yield essentially similar results). Human disturbance appears unrelated to population density (Figure 6, cf. Sterck, 1998). Repeating the analyses of Figs. 5-6 using Newton's dataset yields essentially the same results.


FIGURE 5 LEGEND.
Group size and population density. Because infants and juveniles are not demographically independent of their mothers in a bisexual troop, number of adult females (not total count) is used for troops. Because no males are born into a male band, for these total numbers are used. Shaded symbol with arrow represents Mundanthurai and shaded circle in 5(b) represents Kankane (1980) data for Kanha; neither was used in the analyses for reasons explained in the text.

DISCUSSION
The finding of female monopolization at intermediate population densities giving way to multimale troops at high population densities is readily explicable in terms of economic defendability. High population densities normally lead to high intruder pressures and the inability of a single male to monopolize a troop (an exception may be local concentrations around preferred habitats, where extragroup males are excluded by males of the densely-packed unimale troops; the presence of other troops in the surrounding area gives extragroup males less-costly alternative targets [Moore, 1985]).

At first glance, the finding of multimale troops at low population densities appears inconsistent with economic defendability models; it should be easy to exclude intruders when they are rarely encountered. This neglects the tactics of extragroup males and the importance of cost/benefit ratios for these intruders, however. First, while extragroup males do challenge troop males, these are usually perfunctory and troop males normally drive male bands away without trouble. While aggressive male replacement occurs sometimes, more often the extragroup males' strategy appears to be "monitor a number of troops; sooner or later a resident male will fall sick or be eaten--then invade" (Moore, 1985). As population density decreases, intertroop spacing tends to increase and extragroup males have farther and farther to go to monitor (and challenge) troop males. At some point range size becomes so great that the cost of monitoring several troops exceeds the benefit of having several males in the pool of "potential losers" and males who would otherwise become extragroup do better by remaining with a single troop most of the time, waiting for the resident to fail and seizing occasional chances to copulate (Moore, 1985).

In this scenario, the presence of multiple males in a troop does not mean that it is functionally (i.e., genetically) a multi-male troop. A dominant male might be able to prevent others from breeding; the term "multi-male" obscures two very different forms of social organization (Henzi, 1988; Vogel, 1977). Monopolization within an apparently multi-male group could be accomplished via contests over receptive females, peripheralization, or outright seasonal expulsion. All characterize low-density Himalayan sites (Bishop, 1979) and it is clear that at least at Junbesi, troops are usually reproductively single-male (Boggess, 1980). The lower intruder pressure (fewer contacts with extragroup males) permits steep dominance hierarchies to arise, mediating competition as well as breeding and permitting "multi-male" organization (Curtin, 1975). To pursue the analogy with territorial defense, resource holders no longer attempt to keep intruding male bands away from general proximity to the resource; individual rivals are allowed near and contests occur only during direct competition.

The intruder pressure hypothesis can be tested by comparing degree of skew in male reproductive success for multi-male troops at high and low population densities; skew should be high at low density non-seasonal populations (Orcha, Wilpattu, Kaukori), but low at high-density sites where troops are "truly" multi-male (Gir, Polonnaruwa). Skew at low-density but seasonal sites (Himalayas) should depend on the ability of individual males to monopolize matings against seasonal competition and should be inversely proportional to numbers of simultaneously receptive females. In large troops of synchronously breeding females, the dominant male is likely to be swamped--competitor pressure, analogous to intruder pressure, shifting the economics of monopolization (Ridley, 1986). While coalitions occur within all-male bands and may be important during takeovers (Moore, 1985; Sommer, 1988), failure to detect statistical evidence for them in troops makes the role of male cooperation in troop defense against male bands uncertain. Coalitions are likely to survive only if subordinate members benefit from them, via either kin selection or reduced reproductive skew (Vehrencamp, 1983).

The genetic data needed to test the hypothesis definitively are not available for most sites. However, at the moderately-low density site of Ramnagar (26 individuals/km2) male dominance hierarchies were linear and faecal DNA paternity studies of 29 infants across ten mating seasons in three troops indicate that the alpha male of multimale troops sired on average 57% of infants (range 0 - 100%)--significantly greater than the 25% expected based on numbers of resident males (Launhardt, 1998). Comparable data from additional sites is required before evaluating the consistency of this single point (showing moderate monopolization at a moderately low-density site) with the model suggested here.

Indirect support for the hypothesis is found in the observation by Newton & Dunbar (1994: 332) that male tenure in single-male troops is shorter at higher population densities, supporting an unsurprising relationship between population density and intruder pressure.

Srivastava & Dunbar (1996) developed an economic defendability model similar to that presented here, in which search time (a function of range size) plays the central role in determining whether langur groups are single- or multi-male. Following Moore (1985) they find a curvilinear relationship between population density and the distribution of single-male troops; however, they found a better fit to the data using a 3rd-order polynomial rather than a quadratic. They interpret this as arising from the complex intercorrelations among population density, birth rate, climatic seasonality, number of females per group, and range size, with the later two the most important. Our conclusions agree in emphasizing the importance of economic defendability models and nonlinear relationships between population density and other sociodemographic variables; they differ in two respects.

First, theirs emphasizes the costs of search time, considering the problem as centered in optimal foraging theory; I emphasize the dynamics of intermale competition (a view that may better explain the presence of both unimale and multimale troops at a given site, as based on intermale variation in RHP). These two views may not be in fundamental conflict.

Second, their use of a cubic equation requires a fairly complex explanation (see Srivastava & Dunbar, 1996: 224) relative to the one presented here, at modest gain in explanatory power (they give an R2 of 0.330 for the quadratic and 0.57 for the cubic versions; using the numbers in their Table 1, I obtain R2 values of 0.281 and 0.432 respectively) that relies greatly on the accuracy of several high-density estimates. (Ironically, using my density estimates instead of theirs improves the relative advantage of the cubic equation: R2 = 0.270 and 0.459 respectively.) Figure 7 presents R2 values for various datasets used, as a function of the order of the polynomial equation fitted. For most there is an inflection at the 3rd-order point; I remain unconvinced of the need for more complex 3rd-order explanations, especially given the uncertainties connected with many of the data points, but the choice is the reader's. What is clear is that primatologists need to consider nonlinearity in socioecological analyses.


FIGURE 7 LEGEND.
Variance and polynomial choice: Amount of variance explained (R2) by first- through ninth-order regressions of troop composition on population density in three different data sets. Large filled symbols and "M": Moore dataset (present analysis); small filled symbols and "N": Newton (1988); open symbols: Srivastava & Dunbar (1996). Squares = adult males/troop (cf. Figure 4a), circles = per cent one-male groups (OMG, cf. Figure 4b), triangle = Srivastava & Dunbar % OMG, but with Polonnaruwa population density set to 60 individuals/km2. Amount of variance explained depends heavily on both the dataset used and on the order of the regression selected.

This analysis suggests that the pattern of male group membership within gray langurs is not well explained by the leading general hypothesis for primates (numbers of adult females; Mitani et al., 1996; Newton & Dunbar, 1994; see Figure 3), though some readers likely will differ in interpretation of a relationship for which the amount of variance explained is less than the associated statistical significance. Space precludes a complete analysis of the main alternative, seasonality of reproduction (Ridley, 1986). Ridley's criteria can only roughly be applied to birth seasonality information in Bishop (1979) and Moore (1985) (for most sites, birth months are only estimated, rendering the "75% of births" birth season criterion of Ridley impossible to apply strictly; Ridley excluded P. entellus from his analysis in part for this reason). As an exploratory analysis I nevertheless have used the Bishop and Moore data to estimate crudely birth season lengths and to categorize sites into short (2 or fewer months) and long (5 months or more) birth seasons. Troop adult sex ratio (per cent males, calculated as (mean # AM)/(mean #AM + mean #AF) at a site) was not significantly related to birth season length, though a quadratic equation fit an inverted-U to the data reasonably well (linear: R2 = 0.025, p > 0.5; quadratic: R2 = 0.335, p = 0.16; N = 12; calculating adult sex ratios with site medians improved the quadratic fit but only slightly). Sex ratio was not correlated with short/long birth seasonality (Mann-Whitney U4,5 = 7.0, p > 0.4). However, the limited and crude data here are consistent with the absence of single-male troops at sites with short breeding seasons (Table 5). Clearly, more work is needed.


Table 5: Birth seasonality and male membership in troops
Troop Structure
Single-male Multi-male
Birth Season Short (2 months or less) Bhimtal
Melemchi
Kaukori
Long (5 months or more) Dharwar
Mt. Abu (town)
Orcha
Polonnaruwa
The absence of single-male sites (75% or more troops at a site single-male) with short birth seasons is consistent with findings of Ridley (1986), but is here not significant (Fisher exact probability = 0.286).

I suggest that intruder pressure, mediated by population density and possibly influenced by birth seasonality, is responsible for the distribution of multi-male and single-male troops in gray langurs.

Given this ecological basis for the distribution of single- and multi-male troops, Newton's (1988) account of the distribution of infanticide as a function of the prevalence of single-male troops takes on predictive value as an explanation. It should be noted that to the extent that "multi-male" troops at low density sites are genetically single-male (with high or absolute reproductive skew) sexually selected infanticide is predicted for these as well; the recent observation of infanticide at Ramnagar is a case in point (Borries, 1997).

If correct, this is a satisfying explanation for variation in one aspect of demography (AM/t) and infanticide in langurs, at an ultimate level. For a more proximate explanation of the ontogenetic and behavioral factors that promote aggressive takeovers and infanticide at intermediate population densities, see Boggess (1980; 1984) and Curtin (1975; 1981). While Boggess and Curtin interpreted the processes that prevent formation of a stable multi-male group as atypical and/or pathological phenomena deriving from human disturbance, their descriptions of the interplay amongst learning, experience, strategy and tactics among langurs can readily be seen as a starting point for a developmentally rich account of sexually-selected male langur behavior.

Caution must be used extrapolating conclusions based on this intraspecific analysis to discussions of interspecific patterns in the composition of primate groups (Mitani et al., 1996; Ridley, 1986), but these data support the proposition that patterns of male competition and cooperation, as they relate to population (intruder) density, are a major influence on group composition.

III. CONCLUSION

For two archetypal examples of crowding-induced social pathology, population density can be seen as strongly patterning the supposed "pathologies" via correlated effects on levels of intermale competition. The consequences of variation in intruder pressure change in nonlinear fashion, in various birds, captive rats, and wild langur monkeys. Models assuming linear effects seem to be grounded in the curious implicit belief that higher densities are always "worse", a view that neglects the range of behavioral options open to nonhuman primates (and other taxa) to regulate and mediate normal (i.e., non-pathological) conflict (de Waal, 1989; 1996).

The possibility of nonlinear density-dependent effects on competitive regimes are worth considering when trying to interpret intersite variation in other taxa. For example, Sugiyama (1984; in press) has reported evidence for male dispersal among chimpanzees at Bossou. This is in marked contrast to the pattern of male philopatry documented elsewhere (Morin et al., 1994; Pusey, 1980) and a recent discussion of Sugiyama's findings notes that "the Bossou chimps live in an extremely disturbed area and ... such conditions may explain their unusual behavior" (Normile, 1998). The "explanation" Normile refers to appears (implicitly) to be that disturbance leads to "unusual" (i.e., nonadaptive, pathological) behavior via either direct psychological effects or indirectly, by interference with the operation of normative evolved behavioral mechanisms (cf. Boggess, 1984). Another possibility however is that the isolation of the Bossou community results in such a low intruder pressure that male xenophobia and territoriality are either uneconomical or remain unlearned (cf. the developmental arguments of Power, 1991 [see Moore, 1992a for a critique of this badly flawed but interesting book]). This later interpretation implies that inter-community relationships among chimpanzees living at very low densities (< 0.1/km2; Moore, 1992b) might "normally" be less aggressive than those at intermediate densities (the economic defendability theory could be speculatively invoked to suggest that territoriality also might break down at high densities--c.f. "carnivals", Reynolds, 1965). If that were so, the unusual (but not pathological) behavior at Bossou would be seen as a normal expression of chimpanzee behavior in a particular socioecological context, one of particular interest to modelers of human evolution (Reynolds, 1966).

Acknowledgments. I thank Carola Borries, Dan Moriarty, Margaret Schoeninger, Volker Sommer, Karen Strier, and two anonymous reviewers for their very useful comments on an earlier draft. Carola Borries, Sarah Hrdy, Caroline Ross, and Volker Sommer very kindly provided unpublished data and/or useful references. My sincere gratitude goes to Mike Huffman and Juichi Yamagiwa for their efforts in hosting the conference that gave rise to this work (and their editorial efforts since). Research in India was supported by NSF BNS-7923014.

Back to list of publications

APPENDIX I: The data.

Abu Forest Newton: 10.5 AF/troop, 1.7 AM/troop. These figures include two troops apparently undergoing male incursions (JLA and DW's in Moore, 1985) when they were censused. Male band size 8.2: Newton apparently excluded a solitary male.

Abu Town Newton: 1.0 AM/troop. Census data in Moore (1985) came primarily from a single census sweep, which took place shortly after a unimale troop male was killed by a truck. From a socioecological standpoint, this was an atypical situation and I assigned this troop 1 male for generating a site average. Male bands: Moore (1985) lists three (plus a fourth transitory band excluded here). Srivastava & Dunbar (1996) list just "Mt. Abu". Their mean number of females/troop and % OMG appear to come from Moore (1985) values for Abu Town, but their figure for population density (50 individuals/km2) is from Hrdy (1977) who did not strictly distinguish habitats nor present methods of calculation.

Dharwar Forest Newton: Male band size 15. He evidently used only (Sugiyama, 1964); (Sugiyama, 1967) reports a band of 59 which is included here. Srivastava & Dunbar list just "Dharwar". Their mean number of females/troop and % OMG resemble those of Moore (1985) for Dharwar Forest, but their estimate of population density (13 individuals/km2) is far closer to the 16/km2 for Dharwar Open than to the 85 individuals/km2 of Dharwar Forest used by Moore (1985) and Newton (1988). I have no explanation; perhaps it is a typographical error in their Table 1. Treves & Chapman (1996) give the density of "Dharwar" as 91.5, citing Sugiyama (1965); that source states that "the population density ... in the forest part of Dharwar is from 85 to 135 animals/km2" (Moore and Newton used the lower figure for a variety of reasons; the interested reader[s] should contact this author for explanation).

Gir Newton: 13.6 AF/troop, 2.4 AM/troop. I used data from Starin (1978) excluding her second, post-takeover count of Jamwadla troop, and Rahaman (1973) excluding Jamwadla, which Starin had previously counted. Srivastava & Dunbar (1996) give the density as 112 individuals/km2 while both Moore (1985) and Newton (1988) used 121 individuals/km2; Srivastava & Dunbar's figure is presumably a typographical error (inspection of their Figure 5 indicates the error was incorporated in their analysis; the consequences would presumably have been slight).

Jodhpur I used Mohnot et al. (1984) as it represents a near-complete census of the Jodhpur langur population. Srivastava & Dunbar (1996) used a different but comparable census and their figures differ slightly. V. Sommer (personal communication) notes that the crude population density of 15-18 individuals/km2 is based on inclusion of rarely-used corridors and ecological lacunae, and that adjusting for such features would yield an ecologically more meaningful density for Jodhpur of about 26 individuals/km2. This would improve the fit of the curves in Figure 4 slightly, but I have stayed with the figure of 18 individuals/km2 for consistency with other published analyses.

Kanha Kankane surveyed langur populations in Kanha NP in 1977 (Kankane, 1980) and Newton began work there in 1981; it is not clear how much their samples overlapped. Data from each study have been plotted but for most analyses only Newton's data have been used, to avoid double-counting. Considering these as independent samples would slightly increase the significance of the patterns described. Srivastava & Dunbar (1996) appear to have used Newton's figures for mean number of females per troop and Kankane's for % OMG.

Kaukori Srivastava & Dunbar (1996) give no population density for this site (and presumably did not use it in their density-related calculations); Newton (1988) used 2.7 individuals/km2 (based on calculations by Hrdy, 1977, from data in Jay, 1965). Jay (1965) notes that only one group of 54 was found in an area of about 8 square miles (yielding a rough density of 2.7 individuals/km2), but Jay (1963) gives the size of this group's range as 3 square miles (for 6.9 individuals/km2). I have used the midpoint of these two estimates, 4.8 individuals/km2.

Melemchi Newton: 2.5 AM/troop. The source of this is not clear; Bishop (1979) presents data for one troop, containing 3-5 males.

Orcha Srivastava & Dunbar (1996) use a population density of 6 individuals/km2; this is the high end of a range of 2.7-6.0 individuals/km2 calculated by Hrdy (1977) from Jay (1965). Newton (1988) and I use the midpoint of this range, 4.4 individuals/km2.

Rajaji Srivastava & Dunbar (1996) use 80 individuals/km2, the figure given by Laws & Vonder Haar Laws (1984) for bisexual troop density; as the later authors note, ecological density would be somewhat higher due to inclusion of extragroup males, and Newton (1988) and I use 90/km2 for this site.

Ranthambhore Newton: 66.6% one-male troops, 21.7 AF/troop, 7.7 AM/troop. I excluded a group of 15 AF and 40 AM, censused once, that was probably undergoing a male incursion. The resulting change in mean AM/troop is substantial.

Sariska Newton: 25% one-male, 12.5 AM/troop, density 104/km2. Newton bases % one-male on N= 4 on our collaborative interpretation of (Vogel, 1973; 1977), in which we excluded the "large mixed group" containing 24 males (with it, the figure would be 20% one-male). However, Newton's 12.5 AM/troop figure is the average of one unimale troop and the 24-male troop; I excluded this male count from both % one-male and average AM/troop calculations. Finally, Ross & Srivastava (1994) calculated population density of 30/km2; Ross was able to determine number of adult males for 12 troops, all of which were one-male (personal communication). Neither I nor Ross have an explanation for the dramatic density difference; I have calculated % one-male as the sum of Ross' and Vogel's data (1/4 + 12/12 = 81%). Srivastava & Dunbar (1996) base their data entirely on Ross & Srivastava; the discrepancy between their density of 28 individuals/km2 and 30/km2 is unexplained but presumably trivial.

REFERENCES
  1. Altmann, S. A. & Altmann, J. (1979). Demographic constraints on behavior and social organization. pp. 47-64 IN Bernstein, I. S. & Smith, E. O. (Ed.), Primate Ecology and Human Origins. New York: Garland Press.
  2. Anderson, B., Erwin, N., Flynn, D., Lewis, L. & Erwin, J. (1977). Effects of short-term crowding on aggression in captive groups of pigtail monkeys (Macaca nemestrina). Aggr. Behav. 3: 33-46.
  3. Aureli, F., Vaneck, C. J. V. & Veenema, H. C. (1995). Long-tailed macaques avoid conflicts during short-term crowding. Aggr. Behav. 21: 113-122.
  4. Barnett, S. A. (1975). The Rat: A Study in Behavior. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  5. Bartlett, T. Q., Sussman, R. W. & Cheverud, J. M. (1993). Infant killing in primates: a review of observed cases with specific reference to the sexual selection hypothesis. Am. Anthropol. 95: 958-990.
  6. Bishop, N. (1979). Himalayan langurs: temperate colobines. J. Hum. Evol. 8: 251-281.
  7. Bishop, N., Hrdy, S. B., Teas, J. & Moore, J. (1981). Measures of human influence in habitats of South Asian monkeys. Int. J. Primatol. 2: 153-167.
  8. Boggess, J. (1980). Intermale relations and troop male membership changes in langurs (Presbytis entellus) in Nepal. Int. J. Primatol. 1: 233-274.
  9. Boggess, J. (1984). Infant killing and male reproductive strategies in langurs (Presbytis entellus). pp. 283-310 IN Hausfater, G. & Hrdy, S. B. (Ed.), Infanticide: Comparative and Evolutionary Perspectives. New York: Aldine.
  10. Borries, C. (1997). Infanticide in seasonally breeding multimale groups of Hanuman langurs (Presbytis entellus) in Ramnagar (South Nepal). Behav. Ecol. Sociobiol. 41: 139-150.
  11. Brotherton, P. N. M. & Manser, M. B. (1997). Female dispersion and the evolution of monogamy in dik-diks. Anim. Behav. 54: 1413-1424.
  12. Calhoun, J. B. (1962a). Population density and social pathology. Scient. Amer. 206: 139-148.
  13. Calhoun, J. B. (1962b). A "behavioral sink". pp. IN Bliss, E. L. (Ed.), Roots of Behavior. New York: Harper.
  14. Calhoun, J. B. (1963a). The Ecology and Sociology of the Norway Rat. Washington DC: US Dept. HEW, Public Health Service Document No. 1008, US Govt Printing Office.
  15. Calhoun, J. B. (1963b). The social use of space. pp. 1-187 IN Mayer, W. V. & van Gelder, R. G. (Ed.), Physiological Mammalogy. Vol. 1. Mammalian Populations. New York: Academic Press.
  16. Calhoun, J. B. (1972). Plight of the Ik and Kaiadilt is seen as a chilling possible end for Man. Smithsonian Magazine. 3: 27-32.
  17. Curtin, R. & Dolhinow, P. (1978). Primate social behavior in a changing world. Amer. Sci. 66: 468-475.
  18. Curtin, R. A. (1975). Females, males competition and gray langur troop structure. Folia primatol. 37: 216-227.
  19. Curtin, R. A. (1981). Strategy and tactics in male gray langur competition. J. Hum. Evol. 10: 245-253.
  20. de Waal, F. B. M. (1989). Peacemaking Among Primates. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
  21. de Waal, F. B. M. (1996). Good Natured: The Origins of Right and Wrong in Humans and other Animals. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
  22. Elman, J. L., Bates, E. A., Johnson, M. H., Karmiloff-Smith, A., Parisi, D. & Plunkett, K. (1996). Rethinking Innateness: A Connectionist Perspective on Development. Cambridge: MIT Press.
  23. Freedman, J. L. (1975). Crowding and Behavior. San Francisco: W. H. Freeman.
  24. Hausfater, G. (1984). Infanticide in langurs: Strategies, counterstrategies, and parameter values. pp. 257-281 IN Hausfater, G. & Hrdy, S. B. (Eds.), Infanticide: Comparative and Evolutionary Perspectives. New York: Aldine.
  25. Hausfater, G. & Hrdy, S. B. (1984). Infanticide: Comparative and Evolutionary Perspectives. New York: Aldine. 598.
  26. Henzi, S. P. (1988). Many males do not a multimale troop make. Folia primatol. 51: 165-168.
  27. Hill, D. A. (1999). Effects of provisioning on the social behaviour of Japanese and rhesus macaques: implications for socioecology. Primates. 40: 187-198.
  28. Hladik, C. M. (1975). Ecology, diet, and social patterning in Old and New World Primates. pp. 3-35 IN Tuttle, R. H. (Ed.), Socioecology and Psychology of Primates. The Hague: Mouton.
  29. Hladik, C. M. (1977). A comparative study of the feeding strategies of two sympatric species of leaf monkeys: Presbytis senex and Presbytis entellus. pp. 323-353 IN Clutton-Brock, T. H. (Ed.), Primate Ecology. London: Academic Press.
  30. Hrdy, S. B. (1977). The Langurs of Abu. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
  31. Hrdy, S. B., Janson, C. & van Schaik, C. (1995). Infanticide: let's not throw out the baby with the bath water. Evol. Anthropol. 3: 151-154.
  32. Jay, P. (1963). The social behavior of the langur monkey. Ph. D. thesis, University of Chicago.
  33. Jay, P. (1965). The common langur of North India. pp. 197-249 IN DeVore, I. (Ed.), Primate Behavior. New York: Holt, Rinehart & Winston.
  34. Judge, P. G. & de Waal, F. B. M. (1993). Conflict avoidance among rhesus monkeys: coping with short-term crowding. Anim. Behav. 46: 221-232.
  35. Judge, P. G. & de Waal, F. B. M. (1997). Rhesus monkey behaviour under diverse population densities: coping with long-term crowding. Anim. Behav. 54: 643-662.
  36. Kankane, P. L. (1980). Studies on the Hanuman langur, Presbytis entellus (Dufresne) (Primates: Cercopithecidae), at Kanha National Park, M. P. Proceedings, Wild Life Workshop. Dehra Dun: pp. 61-71
  37. Koenig, A., Borries, C., Chalise, M. K. & Winkler, P. (1997). Ecology, nutrition and the timing of reproductive events in an Asian primate, the Hanuman langur (Presbytis entellus). J. Zool. (Lond.). 243: 215-235.
  38. Krebs, J. R. & Davies, N. B. (1987). An Introduction to Behavioural Ecology (2nd edition). Sunderland (MA): Sinauer.
  39. Launhardt, K. 1998. Paarungs- und Reproduktionserfolg maennlicher Hanuman Languren (Presbytis entellus) in Ramnagar / Suednepal. [Mating and reproductive success of male Hanuman langurs (Presbytis entellus) in Ramnagar (southern Nepal)]. Goettingen: Cuvillier.
  40. Mathur, R. & Manohar, B. R. (1992). Rate of takeovers in groups of Hanuman langurs (Presbytis entellus) at Jaipur. Folia primatol. 58: 61-71.
  41. McAllister, J. W. (1998). Is beauty a sign of truth in scientific theories? Amer. Sci. 86: 174-183.
  42. Mitani, J. C., Gros-Louis, J. & Manson, J. H. (1996). Number of males in primate groups - comparative tests of competing hypotheses. Am. J. Primatol. 38: 315-332.
  43. Mohnot, S. M., Dave, V. K., Agoramoorthy, G., Rajpurohit, L. S. & Gehlot, M. S. (1984). First annual report (December, 1982 to December, 1983) on the project entitled Ecobehavioral Studies of Hanuman Langur, Presbytis entellus. Jodhpur: Dept. of Zoology, University of Jodhpur.
  44. Moore, J. (1985). Demography and sociality in primates. Ph. D. thesis, Harvard University.
  45. Moore, J. (1992a). The Egalitarians - Human and Chimpanzee (book review). Am. J. Phys. Anthropol. 88: 259-262.
  46. Moore, J. (1992b). "Savanna" chimpanzees. pp. 99-118 IN Nishida, T., McGrew, W. C., Marler, P., Pickford, M. & de Waal, F. B. M. (Ed.), Topics in Primatology, Vol. I: Human Origins. Tokyo: University of Tokyo Press.
  47. Morin, P. A., Moore, J., Chakraborty, R., Jin, L., Goodall, J. & Woodruff, D. S. (1994). Kin selection, social structure, gene flow, and the evolution of chimpanzees. Science. 265: 1193-1201.
  48. Myers, J. P., Connors, P. G. & Pitelka, F. A. (1981). Optimal territory size and the sanderling: compromises in a variable environment. pp. IN Kamil, A. C. & Sargent, T. D. (Ed.), Foraging Behavior: Ecological, Ethological and Psychological Approaches. New York: Garland STPM Press.
  49. Newton, P. N. (1986). Infanticide in an undisturbed forest population of Hanuman langurs (Presbytis entellus). Anim. Behav. 34: 785-789.
  50. Newton, P. N. (1987). The social organization of forest Hanuman langurs (Presbytis entellus). Int. J. Primatol. 8: 199-232.
  51. Newton, P. N. (1988). The variable social organization of hanuman langurs (Presbytis entellus), infanticide, and the monopolization of females. Int. J. Primatol. 9: 59-77.
  52. Newton, P. N. & Dunbar, R. I. M. (1994). Colobine monkey society. pp. 311-346 IN Davies, A. G. & Oates, J. F. (Ed.), Colobine Monkeys: Their Ecology, Behaviour and Evolution. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  53. Normile, D. (1998). Habitat seen playing larger role in shaping behavior. Science. 279: 1454-1455.
  54. Oppenheimer, J. R. (1977). Presbytis entellus, the Hanuman langur. pp. 468-512 IN Monaco, H. S. H. P. R. I. o. & Bourne, G. H. (Ed.), Primate Conservation. New York: Academic Press.
  55. Power, M. (1991). The Egalitarians--Human and Chimpanzee. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  56. Pusey, A. E. (1980). Inbreeding avoidance in chimpanzees. Anim. Behav. 28: 543-582.
  57. Rahaman, H. (1973). The langurs of the Gir Sanctuary (Gujarat) -- a preliminary survey. J. Bombay nat. Hist. Soc. 70: 294-314.
  58. Reynolds, V. (1965). Budongo: A Forest and its Chimpanzees. London: Methuen.
  59. Reynolds, V. (1966). Open groups and hominid evolution. Man. 1: 441-452.
  60. Ridley, M. (1986). The number of males in a primate group. Anim. Behav. 34: 1848-1858.
  61. Ripley, S. (1965). The ecology and social behavior of the Ceylon gray langur, Presbytis entellus theristes. Ph. D. thesis, U. C. Berkeley.
  62. Ripley, S. (1967). Intertroop encounters among Ceylon gray langurs (Presbytis entellus). pp. 237-253 IN Altmann, S. A. (Ed.), Social Communication Among Primates. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  63. Ripley, S. (1979). Environmental grain, niche diversification, and positional behavior in Neogene primates: an evolutionary hypothesis. pp. 37-74 IN Morbeck, M. E. & Preuschoft, H. (Ed.), Environment, Behavior and Morphology: Dynamic Interactions in Primates. New York: Gustav Fischer.
  64. Ripley, S. (1980). Infanticide in langurs and man: adaptive advantage or social pathology? pp. 349-390 IN Cohen, M. N., Malpass, R. S. & Klein, H. G. (Ed.), Biosocial Mechanisms of Population Regulation. New Haven: Yale University Press.
  65. Roonwal, M. L. (1981). Intraspecific variation in size, proportion of body parts and weight in the Hanuman langur, Presbytis entellus (Primates), in South Asia, with remarks on subspeciation. Rec. zool. Surv. India. 79: 125-158.
  66. Ross, C. (1993). Take-over and infanticide in South Indian Hanuman langurs (Presbytis entellus). Am. J. Primatol. 30: 75-82.
  67. Ross, C. & Srivastava, A. (1994). Factors influencing the population density of the Hanuman langur (Presbytis entellus) in Sariska Tiger Reserve. Primates. 35: 361-367.
  68. Sommer, V. (1988). Male competition and coalitions in langurs (Presbytis entellus) at Jodhpur, Rajasthan, India. Hum. Evol. 3: 261-278.
  69. Sprague, D. S. (1998). Age, dominance rank, natal status, and tenure among male macaques. Am. J. Phys. Anthropol. 105: 511-521.
  70. Srivastava, A. & Dunbar, R. I. M. (1996). The mating system of Hanuman langurs: a problem of optimal foraging. Behav. Ecol. Sociobiol. 39: 219-226.
  71. Starin, E. D. (1978). A preliminary investigation of home range use in the Gir Forest langur. Primates. 19: 551-568.
  72. Sterck, E. H. M. (1998). Female dispersal, social organization, and infanticide in langurs: are they linked to human disturbance? Am. J. Primatol. 44: 235-254.
  73. Sterck, E. H. M. (1999). Variation in langur social organization in relation to the socioecological model, human habitat alteration, and phylogenetic constraints. Primates. 40: 199-213.
  74. Sugiyama, Y. (1964). Group composition, population density and some sociological observations of Hanuman langurs (Presbytis entellus). Primates. 5: 7-37.
  75. Sugiyama, Y. (1965). On the social change of Hanuman langurs (Presbytis entellus) in their natural conditions. Primates. 6: 381-417.
  76. Sugiyama, Y. (1967). Social organization of Hanuman langurs. pp. 221-236 IN Altmann, S. A. (Ed.), Social Communication Among Primates. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  77. Sugiyama, Y. (1984). Population dynamics of wild chimpanzees at Bossou, Guinea, between 1976 and 1983. Primates. 25: 391-400.
  78. Sugiyama, Y. (1999). Socioecological factors of male chimpanzee migration at Bossou, Guinea. Primates. 40: 61-68.
  79. Sussman, R. W., Cheverud, J. M. & Bartlett, T. Q. (1995). Infant killing as an evolutionary strategy: reality or myth? Evol. Anthropol. 3: 149-151.
  80. Thor, D. H. & Carr, W. J. (1979). Sex and aggression: competitive mating strategy in the male rat. Beh. Neur. Biol. 26: 261-265.
  81. Treves, A. & Chapman, C. (1996). Conspecific threat, predation avoidance, and resource defense: implications for grouping in langurs. Behav. Ecol. Sociobiol. 39: 43-53.
  82. Vehrencamp, S. L. (1983). A model for the evolution of despotic versus egalitarian societies. Anim. Behav. 31: 667-682.
  83. Vogel, C. (1973). Hanuman as a research object for anthropologists--field studies of social behavior among the gray langurs of India. German Scholars on India Contrib. to Indian Studies. 1: 349-365.
  84. Vogel, C. (1977). Ecology and sociology of Presbytis entellus. pp. 24-45 IN Prasad, M. R. D. & Anand, T. C. (Ed.), Use of Nonhuman Primates in Biomedical Research. New Delhi: Indian National Science Academy.
  85. Yamagiwa, J. (1999). Socioecological factors influencing population structure of gorillas and chimpanzees. Primates. 40: 87-104.