A cute infant will apparently attract attention no matter what the species
It's easy to make friends when you are holding a baby, suggests a new study that found male Barbary macaques have a better chance of bonding with each other when at least one is hauling around an infant.
The  study, which has been accepted for publication in the journal Animal  Behavior, is among the first to demonstrate that infants likely serve as  social tools for at least some primates. Like a human father pushing  around junior in a stroller or walking a gentle dog, the presence of a  cute, young, defenseless being seems to alleviate tension when meeting  others.
When a  Barbary macaque male encounters another male with an infant, a "bizarre  ritual" takes place, co-author Julia Fischer told Discovery News.
Fischer said the males "sit together, embrace  each other, then they hold up the infant and nuzzle it. Their teeth  chatter and lip smack while making low frequency grumbling noises."
This can go on for quite  a few minutes.
"Sometimes  the males part," she added. "But sometimes they just sit there, holding  the infant, and some time later proceed through this ritual once more.  These interactions require an infant, so to speak, and the assumption is  that carrying an infant is attractive because it allows you to interact  with other males in this way."
Fischer and colleagues  Stefanie Henkel and Michael Heistermann conducted the study at an  outdoor enclosure at La Foret des Singes in Rocamadour, France. It's a  park where the monkeys can range freely, with human visitors restricted  to a path.
The  researchers documented encounters between male macaques, and also took  chemical samples from the males' feces to measure their physiological  stress. The scientists found that males toting infants — not even always  their own — had stronger ties with other males than non-carriers. Male  relationships, as a result, tended to be stronger during the spring than  during the autumn.
Males  who worked their networks in such a way tended to rise up the monkey  social ladder. For example, one male rose from fifth to second place  after acquiring "the highest number of male partners."
Using infants as a  "social tool," however, came with a cost. The researchers found the  baby-hauling males were more stressed out because the often-crying  infants got on the carriers' nerves.
Macaque infant crying "very much sounds like (human)  baby crying," Fischer said. "The acoustic structure is very similar,  just a little bit more high pitched, but very noisy and variable, so  nobody can get used to it."
"It does not surprise me that using infants (as  social tools) causes stress in males," Anthropologist Meredith Small at  Cornell University told Discovery News. "I've seen it and it's intense."

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