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Dominance hierarchy
Dominance hierarchy
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A high-ranking male mandrill advertises his status with bright facial coloration.[1]

In the zoological field of ethology, a dominance hierarchy (formerly and colloquially called a pecking order) is a type of social hierarchy that arises when members of animal social groups interact, creating a ranking system. Different types of interactions can result in dominance depending on the species, including ritualized displays of aggression or direct physical violence.[2]

In social living groups, members are likely to compete for access to limited resources and mating opportunities. Rather than fighting each time they meet, individuals of the same sex establish a relative rank, with higher-ranking individuals often gaining more access to resources and mates. Based on repetitive interactions, a social order is created that is subject to change each time a dominant animal is challenged by a subordinate one.

In eusocial animals, whether mammals or insects, aggressive interactions often lead to the suppression of reproduction in non-dominant individuals. Such interactions may be ritualised, and an individual's resulting rank in the dominance hierarchy may be advertised to other individuals by visual or chemical cues. Suppression operates in some species on the reproductive hormones of non-dominant individuals. Dominance hierarchies exist in many bird species, first observed in the domestic chicken, where the hierarchy is maintained by pecking with the beak.

There is a spectrum of social organisations in different species, from a full despotic hierarchy to a relatively egalitarian system in species with little intraspecific competition. Dominance varies, too, depending on the context or resource, and on group size.

Definitions

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Dominance is an individual's preferential access to resources over another based on coercive capacity based on strength, threat, and intimidation, compared to prestige (persuasive capacity based on skills, abilities, and knowledge).[3] A dominant animal is one whose sexual, feeding, aggressive, and other behaviour patterns subsequently occur with relatively little influence from other group members.[4] Subordinate animals are opposite; their behaviour is submissive, and can be relatively easily influenced or inhibited by other group members.[5]

Dominance

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Wedge-capped capuchins have a clear dominance hierarchy.

For many animal societies, an individual's position in the dominance hierarchy corresponds with their opportunities to reproduce.[6] In hierarchically social animals, dominant individuals may exert control over others. For example, in a herd of feral goats it is a large male that is dominant and maintains discipline and coherence of the flock. He leads the group but shares leadership on a foraging expedition with a mature she-goat who will normally outlast a succession of dominant males.[7] However, earlier work showed that leadership orders in goats were not related to age or dominance.[8] In sheep, position in a moving flock is highly correlated with social dominance, but there is no definite study to show consistent voluntary leadership by an individual.[9] In birds, dominant individuals preferentially select higher perches to put themselves in the best position to detect and avoid predators, as well as to display their dominance to other members of their own species.[10] It has been suggested that decision-taking about the actions of the group is commonly dissociated from social dominance.[11]

When individuals seek high rank

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Given the benefits and costs of possessing a high rank within a hierarchical group, there are certain characteristics of individuals, groups, and environments that determine whether an individual will benefit from a high rank. These include whether or not high rank gives them access to valuable resources such as mates and food. Age, intelligence, experience, and physical fitness can influence whether or not an individual deems it worthwhile to pursue a higher ranking in the hierarchy, which often comes at the expense of conflict. Hierarchy results from interactions, group dynamics, and sharing of resources, so group size and composition affect the dominance decisions of high-ranking individuals. For example, in a large group with many males, it may be difficult for the highest-ranking male to dominate all the mating opportunities, so some mate sharing is likely to exist. These opportunities available to subordinates reduce the likelihood of a challenge to the dominant male: mating is no longer an all-or-nothing game and the sharing is enough to placate most subordinates. Another aspect that can determine dominance hierarchies is the environment. In populations of Kenyan vervet monkeys, high-ranking females have higher foraging success when the food resources are clumped, but when food is distributed throughout an area they lose their advantage, because subordinate females can acquire food with less risk of encountering a dominant female.[12]

Benefits

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Foraging success

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A benefit to high-ranking individuals is increased foraging success and access to food resources. During times of water shortage the highest-ranking vervet females have greater access than subordinates females to water in tree holes. In chacma baboons, the high-ranking males have the first access to vertebrate prey that has been caught by the group, and in yellow baboons the dominant males feed for longer without being interrupted.[12]

In many bird species, the dominant individuals have higher rates of food intake. Such species include dark-eyed juncos and oystercatchers. The dominant individuals in these groups fill themselves up first and fill up more quickly, so they spend less time foraging, which reduces the risk of predation. Thus they have increased survival because of increased nutrition and decreased predation.[12]

Reproductive success

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In primates, a well-studied group, high rank brings reproductive success, as seen in a 1991 meta-analysis of 32 studies.[13] A 2016 study determined that higher status increased reproductive success amongst men, and that this did not vary by type of subsistence (foraging, horticulture, pastoralism, agriculture). This contradicts the "egalitarian hypothesis", which predicts that status would affect reproductive success more amongst foragers than amongst nonforagers.[14]

High-ranking bonnet macaque males have more access to fertile females and consequently partake in most of the matings within the group; in one population, three males were responsible for over 75% of matings. In this population, males often vary in rank. As their rank improves, they gain more exclusive time with fertile females; when their rank decreases, they get less time.[15] In many primates, including bonnet macaques and rhesus monkeys, the offspring of high-ranking individuals have better fitness and thus an increased rate of survival. This is most likely a function of two factors: The first is that high-ranking males mate with high-ranking females. Assuming their high rank is correlated with higher fitness and fighting ability, this trait will be conferred to their offspring. The second factor is that higher-ranking parents probably provide better protection to their offspring and thus ensure higher survival rates.[12] Amongst rhesus macaques, higher-ranking males sired more offspring, though the alpha male was never the one to sire the most offspring, with that instead being a high-ranking but not top male. The complex relationship between rank and reproduction in this species is likely explained by the fact that rhesus macaques queue for dominance, rather than fighting for it, meaning that the alpha male is not necessarily the strongest or most attractive male.[16][17]

In rodents, the highest-ranking male frequently sires the most offspring. The same pattern is found in most carnivores, such as the dwarf mongoose. The dwarf mongoose lives in a social system with one dominant pair. The dominant female produces all or almost all of the offspring in the living group, and the dominant male has first access to her during her oestrus period. In red deer, the males who experienced winter dominance, resulting from greater access to preferred foraging sites, had higher ability to get and maintain larger harems during the mating season.[12]

In many monogamous bird species, the dominant pairs tend to get the best territories, which in turn promote offspring survival and adult health. In dunnocks, a species of bird that experiences many mating systems, sometimes individuals will form a group that will have one dominant male who achieves all of the mating in the group.[12]

In the monogynous bee species Melipona subnitida, the queen seeks to maintain reproductive success by preventing workers from caring for their cells, pushing or hitting them using her antennae. Workers display aggression towards males, claiming priority over the cells when males try to use them to place eggs.[18][19]

Costs of being dominant

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There are costs to being of a high rank in a hierarchical group which offset the benefits. The most common costs to high-ranking individuals are higher metabolic rates and higher levels of stress hormones.[12] In great tits and pied flycatchers, high-ranking individuals experience higher resting metabolic rates and therefore need to consume more food in order to maintain fitness and activity levels than do subordinates in their groups. The energetic costs of defending territory, mates, and other resources can be very consuming and cause high-ranking individuals, who spend more time in these activities, to lose body mass over long periods of dominance. Therefore, their physical condition decreases the longer they spend partaking in these high-energy activities, and they lose rank as a function of age.[12]

In wild male baboons, the highest-ranking male, also known as the alpha, experiences high levels of both testosterone and glucocorticoid, which indicates that high-ranking males undergo higher levels of stress which reduces fitness. Reduced health and longevity occurs because these two hormones have immunosuppressant activity, which reduces survival and presents opportunities for parasitic infestation and other health risks. This reduced fitness due to the alpha position results in individuals maintaining high rank for shorter periods of time and having an overall reduced health and longevity from the physical strain and costs of the position.[20]

Interpersonal complementarity hypothesis

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The interpersonal complementarity hypothesis suggests that obedience and authority are reciprocal, complementary processes. That is, it predicts that one group member's behaviours will elicit a predictable set of actions from other group members. Friendly behaviours are predicted to be met with friendly behaviours, and hostile behaviours are predicted to be reciprocated with similar, hostile behaviours. When an individual acts in a dominant, authoritative manner in a group, this behaviour tends to prompt submissive responses from other group members. Similarly, when group members display submissive behaviour, others feel inclined to display dominant behaviours in return. Tiedens and Fragale (2003) found that hierarchical differentiation plays a significant role in liking behaviour in groups. Individuals prefer to interact with other group members whose power, or status behaviour complements their own. That is to say, group members who behave submissively when talking to someone who appears to be in control are better liked, and similarly individuals who display dominant behaviours (e.g., taking charge, issuing orders) are more liked when interacting with docile, subservient individuals.[21]

Subordinance

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Benefits

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Being subordinate offers a number of benefits. Subordination is beneficial in agonistic conflicts where rank predicts the outcome of a fight. Less injury will occur if subordinate individuals avoid fighting with higher-ranking individuals who would win a large percentage of the time—knowledge of the pecking order keeps both parties from incurring the costs of a prolonged fight. In hens, it has been observed that both dominants and subordinates benefit from a stable hierarchical environment, because fewer challenges means more resources can be dedicated to laying eggs. In groups of highly related individuals, kin selection may influence the stability of hierarchical dominance. A subordinate individual closely related to the dominant individual may benefit more genetically by assisting the dominant individual to pass on their genes.[22]

Alpha male savanna baboons have high levels of testosterone and stress; over a long period of time, this can lead to decreased fitness. The lowest-ranking males also had high stress levels, suggesting that it is the beta males that gain the most fitness, avoiding stress but receiving some of the benefits of moderate rank.[20] The mating tactics of savanna baboons are correlated with their age. Older, subordinate males form alliances to combat higher-ranking males and get access to females.[23]

Fighting with dominant males is a risky behavior that may result in defeat, injury or even death. In bighorn sheep, however, subordinates occasionally win a fight for a female, and they father 44% of the lambs born in the population. These sheep live in large flocks, and dominance hierarchies are often restructured each breeding season.[24]

Burying beetles, which have a social order involving one dominant male controlling most access to mates, display sneak copulation. While one male at a carcass has a 5:1 mating advantage, subordinate males will tempt females away from the carcass with pheromones and attempt to copulate before the dominant male can drive them forcefully away.[25] In flat lizards, young males take advantage of their underdeveloped secondary sex characteristics to engage in sneak copulations. These young males mimic all the visual signs of a female lizard in order to successfully approach a female and copulate without detection by the dominant male. This strategy does not work at close range because the chemical signals given off by the sneaky males reveal their true nature, and they are chased out by the dominant.[26]

Costs to subordinates

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Subordinate individuals suffer a range of costs from dominance hierarchies, one of the most notable being reduced access to food sources. When a resource is obtained, dominant individuals are first to feed as well as taking the longest time. Subordinates also lose out in shelter and nesting sites. Brown hyenas, which display defined linear dominance in both sexes, allow subordinate males and females decreased time of feeding at a carcass.[27] In toque monkeys subordinates are often displaced from feeding sites by dominant males. Additionally, they are excluded from sleeping sites, and they suffer reduced growth and increased mortality.[28]

Subordinate individuals often demonstrate a huge reproductive disadvantage in dominance hierarchies. Among brown hyenas, subordinate females have less opportunity to rear young in the communal den, and thus have fewer surviving offspring than do high-ranking individuals. Subordinate males copulate far less with females than do the high-ranking males.[27] In African wild dogs which live in social packs separated into male and female hierarchies, top-ranking alpha females have been observed to produce 76–81% of all litters.[29]

Mitigating the costs

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Subordinate animals engage in a number of behaviors in order to outweigh the costs of low rank. Dispersal is often associated with increased mortality and subordination may decrease the potential benefits of leaving the group. In the red fox it has been shown that subordinate individuals, given the opportunity to desert, often do not due to the risk of death and the low possibility that they would establish themselves as dominant members in a new group.[30]

Conflict over dominance

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Animal decisions regarding involvement in conflict are defined by the interplay between the costs and benefits of agonistic behaviors. When initially developed, game theory, the study of optimal strategies during pair-wise conflict, was grounded in the false assumption that animals engaged in conflict were of equal fighting ability. Modifications, however, have provided increased focus on the differences between the fighting capabilities of animals and raised questions about their evolutionary development. These differences are believed to determine the outcomes of fights, their intensity, and animal decisions to submit or continue fighting. The influence of aggression, threats, and fighting on the strategies of individuals engaged in conflict has proven integral to establishing social hierarchies reflective of dominant-subordinate interactions.[31]

The asymmetries between individuals have been categorized into three types of interactions:[32]

  1. Resource-holding potential: Animals that are better able to defend resources often win without much physical contact.[32]
  2. Resource value: Animals more invested in a resource are likely to invest more in the fight despite potential for incurring higher costs.[32]
  3. Intruder retreats: When participants are of equal fighting ability and competing for a certain territory, the resident of the territory is likely to end as the victor because he values the territory more. This can be explained further by looking at the example of the common shrews. If one participant believes he is the resident of the territory, he will win when the opponent is weaker or food is scarce. However, if both shrews believe they are the true territory holder, the one with the greater need for food, and therefore, the one that values the resource more, is most likely to win.[32]

As expected, the individual who emerges triumphant is rewarded with the dominant status, having demonstrated their physical superiority. However, the costs incurred to the defeated, which include loss of reproductive opportunities and quality food, can hinder the individual's fitness. In order to minimize these losses, animals generally retreat from fighting or displaying fighting ability unless there are obvious cues indicating victory. These often involve characteristics that provide an advantage during agonistic behavior, such as size of body, displays, etc. Red stags, for example, engage in exhausting roaring contests to exhibit their strength.[32] However, such an activity would impose more costs than benefits for unfit stags, and compel them to retreat from the contest. Larger stags have also been known to make lower-frequency threat signals, acting as indicators of body size, strength, and dominance.[32]

Engaging in agonistic behavior can be very costly and thus there are many examples in nature of animals who achieve dominance in more passive ways. In some, the dominance status of an individual is clearly visible, eliminating the need for agonistic behavior. In wintering bird flocks, white-crowned sparrows display a unique white plumage; the higher the percentage of the crown that consists of white feathers, the higher the status of the individual.[33] For other animals, the time spent in the group serves as a determinant of dominance status. Rank may also be acquired from maternal dominance rank. In rhesus monkeys, offspring gain dominance status based on the rank of the mother—the higher ranked the mother, the higher ranked the offspring will be (Yahner). Similarly, the status of a male Canada goose is determined by the rank of his family. Although dominance is determined differently in each case, it is influenced by the relationships between members of social groups.[34]

Regulation mechanisms

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Individuals with greater hierarchical status tend to displace those ranked lower from access to space, to food and to mating opportunities. Thus, individuals with higher social status tend to have greater reproductive success by mating more often and having more resources to invest in the survival of offspring. Hence, hierarchy serves as an intrinsic factor for population control, ensuring adequate resources for the dominant individuals and thus preventing widespread starvation. Territorial behavior enhances this effect.[35]

In eusocial animals

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The suppression of reproduction by dominant individuals is the most common mechanism that maintains the hierarchy. In eusocial mammals this is mainly achieved by aggressive interactions between the potential reproductive females. In eusocial insects, aggressive interactions are common determinants of reproductive status, such as in the bumblebee Bombus bifarius,[36] the paper wasp Polistes annularis[37] and in the ants Dinoponera australis and D. quadriceps.[38] In general, aggressive interactions are ritualistic and involve antennation (drumming), abdomen curling and very rarely mandible bouts and stinging. The winner of the interaction may walk over the subordinated, that in turn assumes a prostrated posture. To be effective, these regulatory mechanisms must include traits that make an individual rank position readily recognizable by its nestmates. The composition of the lipid layer on the cuticle of social insects is the clue used by nestmates to recognize each other in the colony, and to discover each insect's reproductive status (and rank).[39] Visual cues may also transmit the same information. Paper wasps Polistes dominulus have individual "facial badges" that permit them to recognize each other and to identify the status of each individual. Individuals whose badges were modified by painting were aggressively treated by their nestmates; this makes advertising a false ranking status costly, and may help to suppress such advertising.[40]

Other behaviors are involved in maintaining reproductive status in social insects. The removal of a thoracic sclerite in Diacamma ants inhibits ovary development; the only reproductive individual of this naturally queenless genus is the one that retains its sclerite intact. This individual is called a gamergate, and is responsible for mutilating all the newly emerged females, to maintain its social status. Gamergates of Harpegnathos saltator arise from aggressive interactions, forming a hierarchy of potential reproductives.[41]

In the honey bee Apis mellifera, a pheromone produced by the queen mandibular glands is responsible for inhibiting ovary development in the worker caste.[42] "Worker policing" is an additional mechanism that prevents reproduction by workers, found in bees and ants. Policing may involve oophagy and immobilization of workers who lay eggs.[43] In some ant species such as the carpenter ant Camponotus floridanus, eggs from queens have a peculiar chemical profile that workers can distinguish from worker laid eggs. When worker-laid eggs are found, they are eaten.[44] In some species, such as Pachycondyla obscuricornis, workers may try to escape policing by shuffling their eggs within the egg pile laid by the queen.[45]

Hormonal control

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Modulation of hormone levels after hibernation may be associated with dominance hierarchies in the social order of the paper wasp (Polistes dominulus).[46] This depends on the queen (or foundress), possibly involving specific hormones. Laboratory experiments have shown that when foundresses are injected with juvenile hormone, responsible for regulating growth and development in insects including wasps, the foundresses exhibit an increase in dominance.[46] Further, foundresses with larger corpora allata, a region of the female wasp brain responsible for the synthesis and secretion of juvenile hormone, are naturally more dominant.[46] A follow-up experiment utilized 20-hydroxyecdysone, an ecdysone known to enhance maturation and size of oocytes.[46] The size of the oocytes plays a significant role in establishing dominance in the paper wasp.[47] Foundresses treated with 20-hydroxyecdysone showed more dominance than did those treated with juvenile hormone, so 20-hydroxyecdysone may play a larger role in establishing dominance (Roseler et al., 1984). Subsequent research however, suggests that juvenile hormone is implicated, though only on certain individuals. When injected with juvenile hormone, larger foundresses showed more mounting behaviors than smaller ones, and more oocytes in their ovaries.[47]

The effect of relative rank on stress hormone levels in savanna baboons[20]

Naked mole-rats (Heterocephalus glaber) similarly have a dominance hierarchy dependent on the highest ranking female (queen) and her ability to suppress critically important reproductive hormones in male and female sub-dominants. In sub-dominant males, it appears that luteinizing hormone and testosterone are suppressed, while in females it appears that the suppression involves the entire suppression of the ovarian cycle. This suppression reduces sexual virility and behavior and thus redirects the sub-dominant's behavior into helping the queen with her offspring,[48] though the mechanisms of how this is accomplished are debated. Former research suggests that primer pheromones secreted by the queen cause direct suppression of these vital reproductive hormones and functions however current evidence suggests that it is not the secretion of pheromones which act to suppress reproductive function but rather the queen's extremely high levels of circulating testosterone, which cause her to exert intense dominance and aggressiveness on the colony and thus "scare" the other mole-rats into submission.[49] Research has shown that removal of the queen from the colony allows the reestablishment of reproductive function in sub-dominant individuals. To see if a priming pheromone secreted by the queen was indeed causing reproductive suppression, researchers removed the queen from the colony but did not remove her bedding. They reasoned that if a primer pheromones were on the bedding then the sub-dominant's reproductive function should continue to be suppressed. Instead however, they found that the sub-dominants quickly regained reproductive function even in the presence of the queen's bedding and thus it was concluded that primer pheromones do not seem to play a role in suppressing reproductive function.[49]

Glucocorticoids, signaling molecules which stimulate the fight or flight response, may be implicated in dominance hierarchies. Higher ranking individuals tend to have much higher levels of circulating glucocorticoids than subdominant individuals,[50] the opposite of what had been expected.[51] Two core hypotheses attempt to explain this. The first suggests that higher ranking individuals exert more energy and thus need higher levels of glucocorticoids to mobilize glycogen for energy use.[52] This is supported by the fact that when food availability is low, cortisol levels increase within the dominant male.[51] The second suggests that elevated stress hormones are a result of social factors, particularly when the hierarchy is in transition, perhaps resulting in increased aggression and confrontation. As a result, the dominant individual fights more and has elevated glucocorticoids during this period. Field studies of olive baboons in Kenya seem to support this, as dominant individuals had lower cortisol levels in a stable hierarchy than did subdominant individuals, but the reverse was true at unstable times.[53][51]

Brain pathways and hierarchy

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Several areas of the brain contribute to hierarchical behavior in animals. One of the areas that has been linked with this behavior is the prefrontal cortex, a region involved with decision making and social behavior. High social rank in a hierarchical group of mice has been associated with increased excitability in the medial prefrontal cortex of pyramidal neurons, the primary excitatory cell type of the brain.[54] High ranking macaques have a larger rostral prefrontal cortex in large social groups.[55] Neuroimaging studies with computer stimulated hierarchal conditions showed increased activity in the ventral and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, one processing judgment cues and the other processing status of an individual. Other studies have determined that lesions to the prefrontal cortex (when the area is severed to disrupt functioning to observe its role in behavior) led to deficits in processing social hierarchy cues, suggesting this area is important in regulating this information.[56] Although the prefrontal cortex has been implicated, there are other downstream targets of the prefrontal cortex that have also been linked in maintaining this behavior. This includes the amygdala through lesion studies in rats and primates which led to disruption in hierarchy, and can affect the individual negatively or positively depending on the subnuclei that is targeted. Additionally, the dorsal medial PFC-medial dorsal thalamus connection has been linked with maintenance of rank in mice.[57] Another area that has been associated is the dorsal raphe nucleus, the primary serotonergic nuclei (a neurotransmitter involved with many behaviors including reward and learning). In manipulation studies of this region, there were changes in fighting and affiliative behavior in primates and crustaceans.[56]

In specific groups

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Female dominance in mammals

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The bonobo is one of the few mammals with female-biased dominance.

Female-biased dominance occurs rarely in mammals. It occurs when all adult males exhibit submissive behavior to adult females in social settings. These social settings are usually related to feeding, grooming, and sleeping site priority. It is observed consistently in hyenas, lemurs and the bonobo.[58] The ring-tailed lemur is observed to be the most prominent model of female dominance.[59]

There are three basic proposals for the evolution of female dominance:[60]

  1. The Energy Conservation Hypothesis: males subordinate to females to conserve energy for intense male-male competition experienced during very short breeding seasons
  2. Female behavioral strategy: dominance helps females deal with the unusually high reproductive demands; they prevail in more social conflicts because they have more at stake in terms of fitness.
  3. Male behavioral strategy: males defer as a parental investment because it ensures more resources in a harsh unpredictable climate for the female, and thus, the male's future offspring.

In lemurs, no single hypothesis fully explains female social dominance at this time and all three are likely to play a role. Adult female lemurs have increased concentrations of androgens when they transition from non-breeding to breeding seasons, increasing female aggression.[61][62] Androgens are greater in pregnant female lemurs, which suggests that organizational androgens might influence the developing offspring.[63] Organizational androgens play a role in "explaining female social dominance" in ring-tailed lemurs, as androgens are associated with aggressive behavior in young females.[64] Females that were "exposed to greater concentrations of maternal [androstenedione] late in fetal development were less likely to be aggressed against postnatally, whereas females that were...exposed to greater concentrations of maternal [testosterone]...were more likely to receive aggression postnatally".[64] Dominance rank in female chimpanzees is correlated with reproductive success. Although a high rank is an advantage for females, clear linear hierarchies in female chimpanzees have not been detected.[65] In "masculinized" female mammals like the spotted hyena (Crocuta crocuta), androgens (i.e. specifically, androstenedione and testosterone) are "implicated in the organization and activation of...nonreproductive behavioral traits, including aggression, social dominance, rough-and-tumble play, and scent marking".[66] For aggressively dominant female meerkats (Suricata suricatta), they have "exceptionally high concentrations" of androgens, "particularly during gestation".[67]

Birds

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Bottom-rank chicken showing feather damage from pecking by other hens

The concept of dominance, originally called "pecking order", was described in birds by Thorleif Schjelderup-Ebbe in 1921 under the German terms Hackordnung or Hackliste and introduced into English in 1927.[68] In his 1924 German-language article, he noted that "defense and aggression in the hen is accomplished with the beak".[69] This emphasis on pecking led many subsequent studies on fowl behaviour to use it as a primary observation; however, it has been noted that roosters tend to leap and use their claws in conflicts.[70]

Wild and feral chickens form relatively small groups, usually including no more than 10 to 20 individuals. It has been shown that in larger groups, which is common in farming, the dominance hierarchy becomes less stable and aggression increases.[71]

Dominance hierarchies are found in many species of bird. For example, the blue-footed booby brood of two chicks always has a dominance hierarchy due to the asynchronous hatching of the eggs. One egg is laid four days before the other, and incubation starts immediately after laying, so the elder chick is hatched four days before the younger chick and has a four-day head start on growth. The elder, stronger chick almost always becomes the dominant chick. During times of food shortage, the dominant chick often kills the subordinate chick by either repeatedly pecking or by ousting the younger chick from the nest. The brood hierarchy makes it easier for the subordinate chick to die quietly in times of food scarcity, which provides an efficient system for booby parents to maximize their investment.[72]

Eusocial insects

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In insect societies, only one to few individuals members of a colony can reproduce, whereas the other colony members have their reproductive capabilities suppressed. This conflict over reproduction in some cases results in a dominance hierarchy. Dominant individuals in this case are known as queens and have the obvious advantage of performing reproduction and benefiting from all the tasks performed by their subordinates, the worker caste (foraging, nest maintenance, nest defense, brood care and thermal regulation). According to Hamilton's rule, the reproduction costs of the worker caste are compensated by the contribution of workers to the queen's reproductive success, with which they share genes. This is true not only for the popular social insects (ants, termites, some bees and wasps), but also for the naked mole-rat Heterocephalus glaber. In a laboratory experiment, Clarke and Faulkes (1997) demonstrated that reproductive status in a colony of H. glaber was correlated with the individual's ranking position within a dominance hierarchy, but aggression between potential reproductives only started after the queen was removed.[73]

The social insects mentioned above, excluding termites, are haplodiploid. Queen and workers are diploid, but males develop from haploid genotypes. In some species, suppression of ovary development is not totally achieved in the worker caste, which opens the possibility of reproduction by workers. Since nuptial flights are seasonal and workers are wingless, workers are almost always non-breeders, and (as gamergate ants or laying worker bees) can only lay unfertilised eggs. These eggs are in general viable, developing into males. A worker that performs reproduction is considered a "cheater" within the colony, because it leaves disproportionately more descendants than do its sisters and mother. The advantage of remaining functionally sterile is only accomplished if every worker assume this "compromise". When one or more workers start reproducing, the "social contract" is destroyed and the colony cohesion is dissolved. Aggressive behavior derived from this conflict may result in the formation of hierarchies, and attempts of reproduction by workers are actively suppressed. In some wasps, such as Polistes fuscatus, instead of not laying eggs, the female workers begin being able to reproduce, but once being under the presence of dominant females, the subordinate female workers can no longer reproduce.[74]

In some wasp species such as Liostenogaster flavolineata there are many possible queens that inhabit a nest, but only one can be queen at a time. When a queen dies the next queen is selected by an age-based dominance hierarchy. This is also true in the species Polistes instabilis, where the next queen is selected based on age rather than size. Polistes exclamans also exhibits this type of hierarchy.[75] Within the dominance hierarchies of the Polistes versicolor, however, the dominant-subordinate context in the yellow paper wasps is directly related to the exchange of food. Future foundresses within the nest compete over the shared resources of nourishment, such as protein. Unequal nourishment is often what leads to the size differences that result in dominant-subordinate position rankings. Therefore, if during the winter aggregate, the female is able to obtain greater access to food, the female could thus reach a dominant position.[76]

In some species, especially in ants, more than one queen can be found in the same colony, a condition called polygyny. In this case, another advantage of maintaining a hierarchy is to prolong the colony lifespan. The top ranked individuals may die or lose fertility and "extra queens" may benefit from starting a colony in the same site or nest. This advantage is critical in some ecological contexts, such as in situations where nesting sites are limited or dispersal of individuals is risky due to high rates of predation. This polygynous behavior has also been observed in some eusocial bees such as Schwarziana quadripunctata. In this species, multiple queens of varying sizes are present. The larger, physogastric, queens typically control the nest, though a "dwarf" queen will take its place in the case of a premature death.[77]

Variations

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Spectrum of social systems

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Dominance hierarchies emerge as a result of intersexual and intrasexual selection within groups, where competition between conspecifics results in differential access to resources and mating opportunities. This can be mapped across a spectrum of social organization ranging from egalitarian to despotic, varying across multiple dimensions of cooperation and competition in between.[78] Conflict can be resolved in multiple ways, including aggression, tolerance, and avoidance. These are produced by social decision-making, described in the "relational model" created by the zoologist Frans De Waal.[79] In systems where competition between and within the sexes is low, social behaviour gravitates towards tolerance and egalitarianism, such as that found in woolley spider monkeys.[80][81] In despotic systems where competition is high, one or two members are dominant while all other members of the living group are equally submissive, as seen in Japanese and rhesus macaques, leopard geckos, dwarf hamsters, gorillas, the cichlid Neolamprologus pulcher, and African wild dog.[82][83] Linear ranking systems, or "pecking orders", which tend to fall in between egalitarianism and despotism, follow a structure where every member of the group is recognized as either dominant or submissive relative to every other member. This results in a linear distribution of rank, as seen in spotted hyenas and brown hyenas.[84]

Context dependency

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Eringer cattle competing for dominance

Dominance and its organisation can be highly variable depending on the context or individuals involved. In European badgers, dominance relationships may vary with time as individuals age, gain or lose social status, or change their reproductive condition.[85] Dominance may also vary across space in territorial animals as territory owners are often dominant over all others in their own territory but submissive elsewhere, or dependent on the resource. Even with these factors held constant, perfect dominance hierarchies are rarely found in groups of any great size, at least in the wild.[11] Dominance hierarchies in small herds of domestic horses are generally linear hierarchies whereas in large herds the relationships are triangular.[86] Dominance hierarchies can be formed at a very early age. Domestic piglets are highly precocious and, within minutes of being born, or sometimes seconds, will attempt to suckle. The piglets are born with sharp teeth and fight to develop a teat order as the anterior teats produce a greater quantity of milk. Once established, this teat order remains stable with each piglet tending to feed from a particular teat or group of teats.[87] Dominance–subordination relationships can vary markedly between breeds of the same species. Studies on Merinos and Border Leicesters sheep revealed an almost linear hierarchy in the Merinos but a less rigid structure in the Border Leicesters when a competitive feeding situation was created.[9]

Species with egalitarian or non-linear hierarchies

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Although many group-living animal species have a hierarchy of some form, some species have more fluid and flexible social groupings, where rank does not need to be rigidly enforced, and low-ranking group members may enjoy a wider degree of social flexibility. Some animal societies are "democratic", with low-ranking group members being able to influence which group member is leader and which one is not. Sometimes dominant animals must maintain alliances with subordinates and grant them favours to receive their support in order to retain their dominant rank. In chimpanzees, the alpha male may need to tolerate lower-ranking group members hovering near fertile females[88] or taking portions of his meals.[89] Other examples can include Muriqui monkeys. Within their groups, there is abundant food and females will mate promiscuously. Because of this, males gain very little in fighting over females, who are, in turn, too large and strong for males to monopolize or control, so males do not appear to form especially prominent ranks between them, with several males mating with the same female in view of each other.[90] This type of mating style is also present in manatees, removing their need to engage in serious fighting.[91] Among female elephants, leadership roles are not acquired by sheer brute force, but instead through seniority, and other females can collectively show preferences for where the herd can travel.[92] In hamadryas baboons, several high-ranking males will share a similar rank, with no single male being an absolute leader.[93] Female bats also have a somewhat fluid social structure, in which rank is not strongly enforced.[94] Bonobos are matriarchal, yet their social groups are also generally quite flexible, and serious aggression is quite rare between them.[95] In olive baboons, certain animals are dominant in certain contexts, but not in others. Prime age male olive baboons claim feeding priority, yet baboons of any age or sex can initiate and govern the group's collective movements.

See also

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References

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Further reading

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
A dominance hierarchy is a type of in animal groups where individuals are ranked relative to one another based on consistent asymmetries in agonistic interactions, such as or submission, allowing higher-ranked individuals priority access to limited resources like food, mates, and resting sites. These hierarchies emerge from repeated contests between pairs of individuals, forming dyadic relationships that collectively determine an individual's rank within the group. Dominance is not an inherent trait but a relational attribute established through outcomes of conflicts, where the dominant individual reliably displaces or intimidates the subordinate, often without physical harm in stable hierarchies. Such hierarchies are widespread across taxa, including , birds, ungulates, , and , serving primarily to minimize costly intraspecific by establishing predictable access rights and reducing the need for repeated fights. In linear hierarchies, ranks form a strict order where each individual dominates all below it and submits to all above, though real-world structures can be more complex with ties, reversals, or coalitions influencing outcomes. Higher-ranking animals typically experience fitness benefits, such as improved and lower stress levels, while subordinates may employ alternative strategies like or dispersal to mitigate disadvantages. The formation of dominance hierarchies often occurs rapidly upon group assembly, influenced by factors including body size, age, sex, prior experience, and motivational states, with initial ranks stabilizing through reinforcement or convention over time. Maintenance involves ongoing displays, such as threats or ritualized behaviors, that reaffirm ranks without escalation, though hierarchies can shift due to changes in resource availability, immigration, or mortality. In species like rhesus macaques, hierarchies are matrilineal and stable across generations, underscoring their role in kin-based social organization.

Fundamental Concepts

Definition

A dominance hierarchy is a social ranking system observed in many animal groups, characterized by consistent, asymmetric outcomes in agonistic interactions where higher-ranked individuals, known as dominants, reliably gain priority access to limited resources such as , mates, or over lower-ranked subordinates, often with reduced need for repeated . This structure emerges from patterns of deference and submission, minimizing costly fights within the group while establishing predictable social order. Key elements of dominance hierarchies include the asymmetry in , where one consistently prevails over another in dyadic encounters; the degree of , ranging from strict transitive "pecking orders" (where if A dominates B and B dominates C, then A dominates C) to more complex, non-linear networks with cycles or coalitions; temporal stability, as ranks often persist over weeks or months unless disrupted by changes in group composition or condition; and quantitative methods such as David's scores, which aggregate wins and losses weighted by opponents' strengths to rank individuals, or Elo ratings, adapted from chess to track dynamic rank changes based on interaction outcomes. The concept of the dominance hierarchy was first described by Norwegian zoologist Thorleif Schjelderup-Ebbe in , who coined the term "pecking order" based on his observations of domestic chickens, in which he described a linear order where birds at the top could peck any below them without retaliation. Dominance hierarchies differ from prestige hierarchies, another form of , in that dominance relies on coercive tactics like or to enforce rank, whereas prestige is based on voluntary and conferred by others for an individual's skills, , or , leading to influence without force.

Historical Development

The concept of dominance hierarchies originated with early 20th-century observations in avian behavior. In 1922, Norwegian zoologist Thorleif Schjelderup-Ebbe published his seminal work on domestic , introducing the term "pecking order" to describe a linear where individuals consistently dominate or submit to others based on aggressive interactions like pecking. This framework established dominance as a stable, rank-based organization that reduces conflict within groups. By the mid-20th century, researchers expanded the concept beyond birds to and linked it explicitly to resource competition. In 1937, psychologist analyzed dominance in infra-human at zoos, demonstrating how hierarchical ranks determined access to food, mates, and space, influencing social and sexual behaviors. Similarly, ornithologist David Lack's 1943 study of European robins connected dominance-related territorial behaviors to competition for limited breeding resources, highlighting how hierarchies stabilize access to contested sites. These works shifted focus from descriptive observations to functional explanations, emphasizing hierarchies' role in efficient . In the 1970s and 1980s, studies on non-human primates refined understandings of hierarchy structure, with Irwin S. Bernstein's research underscoring the linearity and long-term stability of ranks in species like rhesus macaques. Bernstein's observations showed that while hierarchies often form linear sequences post-group formation, stability depends on consistent agonistic outcomes, challenging earlier assumptions of universal rigidity. The 1990s introduced matrix-based analytical methods, such as those developed by Han de Vries, which use interaction matrices to quantify hierarchy linearity and resolve ambiguities in non-transitive relationships. Recent advancements from 2020 to 2025 have integrated to model non-linear hierarchies, particularly in despotic societies where steep rank gradients prevail. For instance, a 2024 study on rhesus macaques employed network metrics to analyze dominance dynamics, revealing how global connectivity influences rank stability and in highly asymmetric groups. Concurrently, multiparadigm measurement approaches have emerged, as in a 2024 eNeuro paper that combined multiple behavioral assays—such as agonistic observations and resource access tests—in mice to assess hierarchy , stability, and cross-metric consistency, addressing limitations of single-paradigm methods.

Dynamics of Dominance and Subordinance

Benefits and Costs of Dominance

High-ranking individuals in dominance hierarchies often enjoy priority access to critical resources, enhancing their and fitness. In , dominant animals typically secure better opportunities, leading to higher food intake compared to subordinates. This advantage stems from subordinates yielding to dominants, minimizing interference during resource exploitation. Additionally, dominance confers privileges, with dominant males in several species siring a disproportionate share of offspring; in savanna baboons, for example, dominant males sire approximately 34% of a group's offspring. High-rankers also experience less aggression from group members, as subordinates direct challenges elsewhere or submit, thereby conserving energy for other activities. Despite these gains, maintaining dominance imposes significant physiological and physical burdens. Dominant individuals expend more energy on vigilant defense against rivals, often resulting in elevated levels that signal and potential ; in wild male chimpanzees, higher-ranking males exhibit increased fecal testosterone, with both testosterone and cortisol correlating with greater parasite loads. The risk of escalates from frequent confrontations, where challenges can lead to wounds or debilitation. In some species, this translates to reduced longevity.

Benefits and Costs of Subordinance

Subordinates in dominance hierarchies derive several adaptive benefits that promote and position them for potential future gains. A primary advantage is the diminished risk of physical , as low-ranking individuals typically initiate substantially fewer aggressive encounters than dominants, relying instead on to avoid escalation. This behavioral strategy minimizes the energetic and bodily costs associated with fighting, allowing subordinates to preserve resources for essential activities. By sidestepping frequent conflicts, subordinates conserve energy that might otherwise be expended on agonistic interactions, redirecting it toward somatic growth, physiological maintenance, or enhanced reproductive potential in stable groups. Additionally, their position facilitates social learning opportunities, where subordinates can observe and mimic the , , or navigational tactics of higher-ranking individuals without direct , potentially improving their own proficiency over time. Despite these benefits, subordinance imposes significant costs, particularly in resource acquisition and reproductive fitness. Low-ranking animals often face restricted access to vital resources like and , resulting in reduced caloric intake; for example, in dominance-structured flocks of birds such as coal tits, subordinates exhibit greater overnight mass loss due to inferior positions and interrupted feeding. This limitation can compromise nutritional status and overall condition during periods of . Reproductive opportunities are also curtailed, with stress from dominant frequently inducing among subordinates. In cooperatively breeding meerkats, dominant females evict or harass subordinates, elevating levels and suppressing , thereby ensuring reproductive monopoly. This from ongoing suppression further erodes health, increasing susceptibility to and reducing . In the long term, while these costs predominate in hierarchies, subordinance in unstable or developing groups can lead to rank reversals, enabling low-rankers to ascend as demographic shifts or individual maturation alter power dynamics; for instance, in young troops, yearlings frequently reverse positions post-maternal separation, establishing new hierarchies based on emerging strength and alliances. Such outcomes highlight the provisional nature of low rank in fluid social structures.

Strategies for Rank Acquisition and Maintenance

Animals employ a range of behavioral tactics to acquire higher ranks within dominance hierarchies, often minimizing the risks associated with direct confrontation. Coalitions and alliances are prominent strategies, where lower-ranking individuals collaborate to challenge superiors, thereby enhancing their collective access to resources and opportunities. For instance, in spotted hyenas, subordinate females form coalitions to attack higher-ranking individuals, facilitating upward mobility in the hierarchy. Similarly, female alliances in lions enable coordinated defense and offense, allowing coalition members to secure and elevate their social positions. Ritualized displays, such as threat postures and vocalizations, also play a crucial role in rank acquisition by signaling intent and fighting ability without immediate physical harm; in baboons, these displays often precede and resolve contests, establishing dominance through rather than injury. Opportunistic attacks on weakened or distracted rivals further aid acquisition, as subordinates exploit vulnerabilities to overthrow dominants when the cost-benefit ratio favors escalation. Once established, ranks are maintained through subtle behavioral mechanisms that reinforce asymmetries while reducing ongoing conflict. Bluffing and graded signals, including low-intensity threats like stares or mild displacements, allow dominants to assert over subordinates without full-scale fights, preserving energy and minimizing risks. Grooming reciprocity serves as a social tool for maintenance, where dominants receive grooming from subordinates in exchange for tolerance or support, fostering alliances that stabilize the hierarchy; this exchange is particularly evident in , where grooming patterns correlate with rank-related benefits. Displacement activities, such as self-directed behaviors like scratching or yawning during tense interactions, help de-escalate potential conflicts by signaling submission or diffusing , thereby avoiding costly escalations. Conflict dynamics in hierarchies are shaped by escalation thresholds that depend on the perceived value of contested resources, with animals more likely to intensify over high-stakes items like or mates. Winner-loser effects profoundly influence these dynamics, as prior victories increase an individual's probability of winning future encounters by approximately two-thirds, while defeats similarly heighten the chance of subsequent losses, thereby reinforcing hierarchical stability through experience-based confidence modulation. Recent studies, including a 2024 , confirm these effects across diverse taxa, highlighting their role in modulating based on interaction history. Subordinates mitigate the costs of low rank through adaptive strategies like queuing for eventual ascension, dispersal to join more favorable groups, or behaviors that avoid severe repercussions such as . In chimpanzees, females typically queue for dominance by entering hierarchies at the bottom and rising predictably through survival and age, contrasting with males' competitive takeovers, which allows subordinates to endure without constant challenge. Dispersal reduces from suppression, enabling individuals to seek hierarchies where they can achieve higher status. These tactics collectively balance the trade-offs of subordinance, promoting long-term fitness despite immediate disadvantages.

Biological Regulation Mechanisms

Hormonal and Neurobiological Controls

Hormonal mechanisms play a central role in regulating dominance hierarchies, particularly through like , which facilitate and rank-seeking behaviors in vertebrates. Testosterone levels are positively associated with aggressive interactions and the attainment of higher social ranks, as observed in where elevated baseline testosterone predicts future dominance and success. Post-victory surges in testosterone reinforce this link, enhancing the probability of subsequent wins in competitive encounters, a phenomenon known as the winner effect mediated by androgen release. In contrast, glucocorticoids such as mediate stress responses that differentiate dominants from subordinates; subordinate individuals typically exhibit significantly elevated levels due to chronic stress from suppression by higher-ranking conspecifics. Neurobiologically, the mesocorticolimbic dopamine pathway underpins the rewarding aspects of dominance, promoting behaviors that secure or maintain high rank through . Activation of this circuit, involving projections from the to the and prefrontal regions, encodes the value of aggressive actions leading to status gains, as detailed in recent reviews of circuit mechanisms in social dominance. Serotonin, meanwhile, modulates during social challenges, with lower serotonergic activity linked to heightened reactive and risk-taking in dominance contests, thereby influencing the stability of hierarchical structures. Key brain regions integrate these signals to orchestrate dominance-related behaviors. The ventromedial hypothalamus, particularly its ventrolateral subdivision (VMHvl), serves as a critical hub for generating aggressive responses essential to formation, with neuronal ensembles in this area activating in response to dominance-provoking cues. The medial (mPFC) contributes to rank assessment by processing and contextual cues, enabling individuals to evaluate relative status and adjust behaviors accordingly; recent psychopharmacological studies highlight how prior social experiences modulate mPFC activity to influence navigation. Recent research has further identified a forebrain-thalamocortical circuit that regulates social through molecular and neural mechanisms, coordinating competitive interactions in mice. These mechanisms form bidirectional feedback loops, where achieved rank alters hormonal profiles that, in turn, sustain behavioral patterns. For instance, the winner effect creates a self-reinforcing cycle via transient surges following victories, which heighten and confidence in future interactions, thereby stabilizing dominance hierarchies across .

Pathways in Eusocial Species

In eusocial species, plays a central role in maintaining dominance hierarchies by suppressing subordinate reproduction and enforcing reproductive division of labor. In honeybees (Apis mellifera), the queen mandibular pheromone (QMP), a blend of volatile and non-volatile compounds secreted from the mandibular glands, inhibits ovarian development in workers, preventing them from laying eggs and thus preserving the queen's reproductive monopoly. This suppression is mediated through QMP's influence on levels and in worker ovaries, ensuring that workers remain sterile and focus on colony maintenance tasks. Similar pheromonal mechanisms operate in other eusocial hymenopterans, such as and wasps, where queen or dominant individual pheromones signal reproductive status and inhibit subordinate fertility, stabilizing the hierarchy without constant physical conflict. Genetic and further underpin these hierarchies by promoting cooperative behaviors that align individual fitness with colony success, often through morphological or behavioral castes determined by size or age. In , such as those in the genus Diacamma, size-based castes emerge where larger workers dominate smaller ones, securing higher ranks and access to reproduction in queenless colonies, while favors workers aiding full sisters (relatedness r=0.75) over personal reproduction. This enforces a division of labor, with dominant individuals reproducing and subordinates performing or , as predicted by Hamilton's rule where the benefits of exceed direct reproductive costs. Such systems reduce intracolony conflict by channeling into initial rank establishment, after which learned hierarchies minimize further disputes. Behavioral regulation in established hierarchies relies on subtle interactions like trophallaxis (mouth-to-mouth food exchange) and antennation (antenna touching), which reinforce submission and dominance without overt . In eusocial wasps and ants, subordinates signal deference through antennation during encounters, avoiding challenges to dominants, while trophallaxis allows dominants to distribute pheromones or nutrients selectively, further entrenching reproductive skew. Post-establishment, becomes rare as individuals memorize rank relationships, with hierarchies maintained via these non-violent cues that promote cohesion. Recent studies (2022–2025) highlight epigenetic modifications, such as DNA in termite fat bodies and sperm, as key to caste stability; for instance, methylation patterns regulate for division of labor and transgenerationally influence offspring caste fate, ensuring long-term hierarchy persistence in species like Reticulitermes and Zootermopsis. These mechanisms parallel broader hormonal controls but emphasize cooperative chemical signaling unique to eusocial breeders.

Examples in Animal Taxa

Mammals and Female Dominance

In most mammalian species, dominance hierarchies are characterized by male dominance, particularly in primates where males often form coalitions to secure high rank and access to mates. For instance, in chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes), adult males establish a linear hierarchy through aggressive interactions and alliances, with higher-ranking males gaining priority in mating opportunities and resource access. Similarly, wolf packs (Canis lupus) are typically family units led by a breeding pair that coordinates activities such as hunting and territorial defense, with social structure emphasizing familial bonds over strict linear dominance hierarchies. Female dominance represents a notable exception in mammalian hierarchies, observed in species such as spotted hyenas (Crocuta crocuta) and , where females consistently outrank males through matrilineal inheritance of rank. In spotted hyenas, females are approximately 10% larger than males and control clan resources and mating rights via a strict matrilineal system, where daughters inherit their mothers' positions above all males and lower-ranking kin. This structure ensures female-led clans, with high-ranking females directing group movements and suppressing subordinate reproduction. In ring-tailed lemurs (Lemur catta), females form linear hierarchies inherited matrilineally, granting them priority access to food and space over males, who submit to avoid conflict and rarely challenge female authority. Contrasting examples highlight variations in mammalian hierarchy sex roles. Northern elephant seals (Mirounga angustirostris) exhibit extreme male dominance, with dominant bulls establishing and defending harems of up to dozens of females during breeding seasons, using vocalizations and fights to maintain control over reproductive access. In contrast, bonobos (Pan paniscus) feature female coalitions that mitigate male aggression and enforce intersexual dominance, allowing females to collectively outrank males and reduce overall conflict through affiliative bonds. Recent studies on (Theropithecus gelada) underscore the adaptive value of female-led hierarchies in resource defense. Female geladas maintain stable, matrilineally inherited linear ranks within reproductive units, enabling high-ranking females to secure prime areas on cliffside grasslands and protect kin from intergroup incursions, thereby enhancing amid intense resource competition.

Birds

In avian species, dominance hierarchies often manifest through ritualized displays and displacements rather than prolonged physical combat, allowing for efficient resource allocation within flocks. The concept of the "pecking order" originated from observations of domestic chickens (Gallus gallus domesticus), where individuals form linear dominance ranks determined by aggressive pecks and threat displays that displace subordinates from food or space. These hierarchies typically stabilize within days and can persist for months, with the top-ranked "despot" bird rarely challenged and subordinates avoiding confrontation to minimize injury risk. This display-based system reduces overall aggression while ensuring priority access to resources for dominants. Similar linear hierarchies appear in wild relatives of domestic chickens, such as (Gallus gallus), where dominant individuals, often males with larger combs, use vocalizations and postures to assert control over flock mates. In these flocks, high-ranking birds gain first access to feeders and foraging sites, enhancing their feeding efficiency and survival. Among seabirds like (Laridae family), age- and size-based dominance structures emerge in colonies, where established ranks via threat displays and chases minimize escalated fights over prime nest sites. For instance, familiar hierarchies in returning breeders reduce costly , allowing subordinates to secure peripheral nesting areas without constant conflict. Mating contexts further highlight display-driven hierarchies in birds, particularly in lekking where males compete for attention on communal display grounds. In (Centrocercus urophasianus), dominant males occupy central lek territories through strutting displays, wing-flapping, and vocal puffs, suppressing subordinates and securing up to 80% of matings. These positions reflect a stable formed early in the breeding season, with losers relegated to edges where mating success drops sharply. Recent studies reveal fluid dynamics in avian hierarchies, especially in transient groups like those during migration stopovers. In mixed-species foraging flocks of birds, dominance ranks can shift rapidly due to unfamiliarity among individuals, leading to heightened but short-lived displays that reestablish order and reduce prolonged aggression. Such despotic yet adaptable structures in migratory contexts, as observed in guilds and assemblages, allow dominants to maintain resource priority while accommodating group turnover.

Insects

In non-eusocial insects, dominance hierarchies often emerge through physical contests where body size plays a pivotal role in establishing rank, particularly for resource defense. In burying beetles (Nicrophorus spp.), larger individuals typically dominate smaller ones during aggressive interactions over small vertebrate carcasses used for breeding, enabling dominants to secure and defend these resources more effectively against competitors. Similarly, in male field crickets (Gryllus bimaculatus), winners of agonistic fights, often the larger contestants, rapidly form short-term linear hierarchies that reduce further conflict and influence access to mates or shelter. In eusocial , dominance hierarchies extend beyond simple contests to include visual signals that correlate with rank and . For instance, in paper wasps (Polistes dominulus), foundresses with more extensive black markings on their clypeus (facial area) are more likely to achieve dominant status within co-founded nests, allowing them to monopolize egg-laying while subordinates perform and nest maintenance. These markings serve as honest indicators of body size and fighting ability, stabilizing the hierarchy and minimizing overt aggression among nestmates. Combat outcomes in hierarchies frequently exhibit driven by morphological traits such as size, which determines the intensity and resolution of fights. In stag beetles (Prosopocoilus spp.), males with larger s win contests more consistently, as these structures provide leverage for and , leading to quicker submission by smaller opponents without prolonged injury. Such asymmetries promote efficient rank establishment in non-eusocial species like beetles and , where mandible length correlates with resource-holding potential during territorial disputes. These hierarchies also stabilize roles within , particularly in eusocial taxa, by assigning subordinates to resource collection while dominants focus on . In subterranean (Reticulitermes spp.), early-life experiences shape dominance status, with low-ranking individuals adopting tasks that support colony efficiency and reduce internal over food. A 2006 review highlights how such hierarchies in insect societies resolve reproductive conflicts, preventing infighting by enforcing clear divisions of labor and minimizing energy-wasting in colonies.

Variations and Applications

Types of Hierarchies

Dominance hierarchies in animals exhibit diverse structural forms, primarily categorized by their degree of linearity and steepness. Linear hierarchies, often referred to as pecking orders, feature a strict, transitive ordering of individuals where dominance relations are consistent and predictable, such that if individual A dominates B and B dominates C, A invariably dominates C. This structure minimizes uncertainty in social interactions and is exemplified in domestic chickens, where Thorleif Schjelderup-Ebbe first documented a clear ordinal rank system maintained through aggressive behaviors like pecking, with the top-ranked "despot" exerting control over all subordinates. Such hierarchies promote stability by reducing repeated conflicts once ranks are established, as subordinates reliably yield to superiors. In contrast, non-linear or despotic hierarchies incorporate intransitivities, where dominance is not fully transitive due to factors like coalitional alliances that allow lower-ranked individuals to challenge or circumvent higher ones. such as chimpanzees illustrate this, with males forming temporary coalitions to overthrow dominants or secure opportunities, creating a that bypasses simple and concentrates power among a few aggressive individuals. These systems often involve higher rates of intense and submission signals, as ranks are more contested and fluid despite an overall hierarchical framework. Hierarchies also span a continuum from despotic to egalitarian based on steepness, reflecting the magnitude of rank-related disparities in resource access and conflict levels. Despotic hierarchies, like those in rhesus macaques, are characterized by rigid ranks, pronounced inequality, and frequent agonistic interactions where dominants monopolize food and mates, leading to elevated stress among subordinates. At the egalitarian end, hierarchies show shallow gradients with minimal differences in power, fostering tolerance and cooperative behaviors; bonobos exemplify this through female coalitions that enforce relative equality, reducing male dominance and overall compared to related . This spectrum highlights how social structure adapts to ecological pressures, though environmental contexts can modulate these forms. To assess hierarchy structure quantitatively, researchers employ metrics such as Landau's index of (h), which evaluates the extent to which observed dominance interactions conform to a transitive order, yielding values from 0 (completely non-linear, with many inconsistencies) to 1 (perfectly ). Introduced by H. G. Landau in 1951, this index calculates the deviation from expected transitivity based on pairwise encounters, aiding comparisons across groups and . Complementing such measures, a 2025 identified 67 validated scales for evaluating power, status, dominance, and related constructs, offering standardized tools to quantify steepness and in both and psychological studies.

Context Dependency and Egalitarian Systems

Dominance hierarchies in animals are often context-dependent, meaning that an individual's rank can fluctuate based on the specific resource or situation at stake, rather than remaining fixed across all interactions. For instance, in chacma baboons (Papio ursinus), female intrasexual aggression and rank enforcement intensify during periods of conception risk but decrease post-birth when competition shifts toward securing for , illustrating how reproductive modulates hierarchical stability. Similarly, in olive baboons (Papio anubis), female-female conflicts are primarily driven by competition over food resources rather than mating opportunities, leading to situational variations in dominance expression where feeding priority overrides other rank signals. These shifts highlight how environmental and social contingencies, such as resource availability or life stage, can alter the rigidity of hierarchies to optimize access to contested goods. Seasonal and age-related fluidity further exemplifies context dependency, particularly in species with episodic reproductive or demands. In African cichlid fish like Astatotilapia burtoni, dominance hierarchies emerge and stabilize during breeding seasons to regulate male reproductive access and territorial control, but dissolve or reform outside these periods as social structures adapt to non-reproductive contexts. Age also influences rank dynamics; younger individuals may challenge or defer differently based on maturity, contributing to temporal instability in hierarchies across taxa. In contrast to rigid hierarchies, egalitarian systems feature minimal rank differentiation and shared resource access, often arising in species where group survival depends on collective effort rather than individual dominance. mole-rats (Fukomys damarensis), for example, exhibit lower reproductive skew than their relatives, with multiple females potentially breeding in larger groups during favorable conditions, fostering a more egalitarian division of reproductive roles through mechanisms like and flexible skew. Among , egalitarian structures are evident in species with flat hierarchies, where rank-related benefits such as feeding priority or mating success show weak correlations with position, as demonstrated in a 2024 analysis of 38 societies revealing that steeper hierarchies amplify rank advantages while egalitarian ones distribute them more evenly. In small-scale human bands, egalitarianism prevails through social leveling mechanisms that suppress would-be dominants, ensuring equitable food sharing and decision-making, as modeled in simulations showing its emergence from costly punishment of inequality in early societies. Non-linear dominance relationships provide another deviation from traditional linear hierarchies, creating cyclical patterns where no single individual consistently dominates. A classic example occurs in side-blotched lizards (Uta stansburiana), where three male throat-color morphs engage in rock-paper-scissors dynamics: orange-throated males usurp blue-throated territories, blue-throated pair-defend against yellow-throated sneaks, and yellow-throated infiltrate orange harems, resulting in frequency-dependent cycles that prevent stable ranking. Such intransitive interactions underscore how contextual advantages in specific traits can yield egalitarian outcomes by balancing power across group members. Recent research emphasizes these variations in mixed social contexts, particularly among and . A 2022 review highlights that human dominance arises from agonistic behaviors but varies by situational cues like group size or stakes, blending with prestige in fluid hierarchies. A 2025 analysis of 121 species found that male dominance occurs in fewer than 20% of populations, with female dominance emerging in 13% of cases, often linked to traits such as , , arboreality, and intense female-female competition for reproductive control.

Human Dominance Hierarchies

In social groups, dominance hierarchies manifest through implicit ranks that structure interactions and access, particularly in workplaces and institutions. For instance, corporate structures often feature hierarchical arrangements where top executives, such as CEOs, exert influence akin to coalitions, coordinating power through alliances and coercive control to maintain status and direct group outcomes. These hierarchies emerge from agonistic behaviors and , allowing dominant individuals to achieve superior access and fitness benefits, though moderated by cultural norms. In team settings, such ranks influence and , with dominant members often prioritizing control over collective goals. Psychologically, dominance hierarchies are linked to individual attitudes toward inequality, as measured by the (SDO) scale, which assesses preferences for hierarchical social structures and group-based dominance. High SDO individuals tend to favor inequality and legitimize intergroup disparities, influencing their perceptions of fairness in competitive contexts. A 2025 study demonstrated that SDO modulates social valuation, where higher scores correlate with biased fairness judgments in dominance-based interactions, interacting with outcomes to shape dynamic evaluations of others' worth. This orientation extends to , where multiparadigm measures—integrating behavioral observations, self-reports, and validated scales for power, status, dominance, and prestige—reveal how dominance behaviors predict influence and . Gender and cultural factors shape human dominance hierarchies, with mixed-gender contexts showing that dominance contributes to status attainment for both sexes, though men often leverage it more aggressively while women may combine it with prestige strategies. A 2022 review highlighted that in professional environments, women achieve comparable ranks through coercive and affiliative tactics, but face barriers in highly hierarchical settings. Culturally, hierarchies vary from rigid corporate models emphasizing top-down control to flatter structures in startups, where egalitarian norms reduce overt dominance but implicit ranks persist via networks and expertise. Recent 2025 psychological research further indicates that prior hierarchy experiences modulate aggression, with individuals from stable dominant histories showing reduced reactive aggression in social provocations, informing interventions in team-based aggression management.

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