This document summarizes key points about primate social behavior and ecology from an anthropology lecture:
1) Primates live in social groups for protection from predators through increased detection of threats, lower risk of any individual being caught due to group size, and ability to cooperatively defend against attacks.
2) Natural selection has shaped different primate social systems to balance the costs and benefits of group living. Traits like food distribution and competition influence group size and structure.
3) Differences between male and female fitness goals, like access to resources versus access to mates, help drive sex differences in social behaviors like dispersal patterns and alliance formation.