MacaqueNet: Advancing comparative behavioural research through large‐scale collaboration
De Moor, D; Skelton, M; Amici, F; et al.Arlet, ME; Balasubramaniam, KN; Ballesta, S; Berghänel, A; Berman, CM; Bernstein, SK; Bhattacharjee, D; Bliss‐Moreau, E; Brotcorne, F; Butovskaya, M; Campbell, LAD; Carosi, M; Chatterjee, M; Cooper, MA; Cowl, VB; De la O, C; De Marco, A; Dettmer, AM; Dhawale, AK; Erinjery, JJ; Evans, CL; Fischer, J; García‐Nisa, I; Giraud, G; Hammer, R; Hansen, MF; Holzner, A; Kaburu, S; Konečná, M; Kumara, HN; Larrivaz, M; Leca, J; Legrand, M; Lehmann, J; Li, J; Lezé, A; MacIntosh, A; Majolo, B; Maréchal, L; Marty, PR; Massen, JJM; Maulany, RI; McCowan, B; McFarland, R; Merieau, P; Meunier, H; Micheletta, J; Mishra, PS; Sah, SAM; Molesti, S; Morrow, KS; Müller‐Klein, N; Ngakan, PO; Palagi, E; Petit, O; Pflüger, LS; di Sorrentino, EP; Raghaven, R; Raimbault, G; Ram, S; Reichard, UH; Riley, EP; Rincon, AV; Ruppert, N; Sadoughi, B; Santhosh, K; Schino, G; Sheeran, LK; Silk, JB; Singh, M; Sinha, A; Sosa, S; Stribos, MS; Sueur, C; Tiddi, B; Tkaczynski, PJ; Trebouet, F; Widdig, A; Whitehouse, J; Wooddell, LJ; Xia, D; von Fersen, L; Young, C; Schülke, O; Ostner, J; Neumann, C; Duboscq, J; Brent, LJN
Date: 11 February 2025
Article
Journal
Journal of Animal Ecology
Publisher
Wiley / British Ecological Society
Publisher DOI
Abstract
There is a vast and ever-accumulating amount of behavioural data on individually recognised animals, an incredible resource to shed light on the ecological and evolutionary drivers of variation in animal behaviour. Yet, the full potential of such data lies in comparative research across taxa with distinct life histories and ecologies. ...
There is a vast and ever-accumulating amount of behavioural data on individually recognised animals, an incredible resource to shed light on the ecological and evolutionary drivers of variation in animal behaviour. Yet, the full potential of such data lies in comparative research across taxa with distinct life histories and ecologies. Substantial challenges impede systematic comparisons, one of which is the lack of persistent, accessible and standardised databases.
Big-team approaches to building standardised databases offer a solution to facilitating reliable cross-species comparisons. By sharing both data and expertise among researchers, these approaches ensure that valuable data, which might otherwise go unused, become easier to discover, repurpose and synthesise. Additionally, such large-scale collaborations promote a culture of sharing within the research community, incentivising researchers to contribute their data by ensuring their interests are considered through clear sharing guidelines. Active communication with the data contributors during the standardisation process also helps avoid misinterpretation of the data, ultimately improving the reliability of comparative databases.
Here, we introduce MacaqueNet, a global collaboration of over 100 researchers (https://macaquenet.github.io/) aimed at unlocking the wealth of cross-species data for research on macaque social behaviour. The MacaqueNet database encompasses data from 1981 to the present on 61 populations across 14 species and is the first publicly searchable and standardised database on affiliative and agonistic animal social behaviour. We describe the establishment of MacaqueNet, from the steps we took to start a large-scale collective, to the creation of a cross-species collaborative database and the implementation of data entry and retrieval protocols.
We share MacaqueNet's component resources: an R package for data standardisation, website code, the relational database structure, a glossary and data sharing terms of use. With all these components openly accessible, MacaqueNet can act as a fully replicable template for future endeavours establishing large-scale collaborative comparative databases.
Psychology
Faculty of Health and Life Sciences
Item views 0
Full item downloads 0
Except where otherwise noted, this item's licence is described as © 2025 The Author(s). Journal of Animal Ecology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Ecological Society.
This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.