Coexistence of individuals within a social group is
possible through the establishment of a hierarchy. Social dominance
is achieved through aggressive interactions, and, in
wild sheep and goats, it is related mainly to age, body size
and weapon size as rank signals. Adult male Himalayan tahr
are much larger than females and subadult males. They have a
prominent neck ruff, ranging in colour from yellow (5.5–
9.5 years old, i.e. young adults, golden males) to brown
(7.5–14.5 years old, i.e. older individuals, pale and dark
brown males), with golden males being the most dominant.
We investigated the social behaviour of male tahr and
analysed the relationships between ruff colour, courtship and
agonistic behaviour patterns during the rut. Colour classes
varied in their use of several behaviour patterns (male dominance:
approach, stare, horning vegetation; courtship: low
stretch, naso-genital contact, rush). Golden-ruffed males used
more threats than darker ones. Pale brown and dark brown
males addressed threats significantly more often to males of
lower or their own colour classes, respectively, whereas golden
ones addressed threats to all colour classes, including their
own. The courtship of dominant males was characterised by
the assertive rush, whereas that of subordinates did not. Ruff
colour of male Himalayan tahr may have evolved as a rank
signal, homologous to horn size in wild sheep and goats
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