While strong maternal relationships have been linked with improved offspring survival in many mammals, maternal sociality appears to provide little protection against infanticidal males. Here, we evaluated whether maternal social integration predicts offspring survival to adulthood in geladas (Theropithecus gelada), a non-human primate that faces frequent alpha male takeovers coupled with high rates of infanticide. Mothers that formed stronger grooming relationships with their female and male groupmates showed higher offspring survival on average. However, when their infants experienced early-life takeovers and faced elevated infanticide risk, these survival advantages were weaker, delayed to juvenility and linked only to female–female grooming relationships. Thus, long-term social integration was not associated with reduced infanticide risk. Given this, we then examined whether females engaged in short-term social strategies that might provide more targeted protection against would-be male attackers. Following takeovers, females—particularly those with young, vulnerable infants—groomed males less frequently and prioritized deposed, protective males (i.e. their infants’ presumed fathers) over new, potentially infanticidal males. Taken together, these data suggest that gelada mothers: (i) form long-term social relationships that might improve net offspring survival and (ii) implement short-term social strategies that might protect their offspring in ways that long-term relationships cannot.
more »
« less
Caring for infants is associated with increased reproductive success for male mountain gorillas
Abstract Socioecological theory predicts that male parenting among mammals should be rare due to the large payoffs of prioritizing mating effort over parenting. Although these predictions are generally met, in some promiscuous primate species males overcome this by identifying their offspring, and providing benefits such as protection and resource access. Mountain gorillas, which often organize into multi-male groups, are an intriguing exception. Males frequently affiliate with infants despite not discriminating their own from other males’ offspring, raising questions about the function of this behavior. Here we demonstrate that, independent of multiple controls for rank, age, and siring opportunities, male gorillas who affiliated more with all infants, not only their own, sired more offspring than males who affiliated less with young. Predictive margins indicate males in the top affiliation tertile can expect to sire approximately five times more infants than males in the bottom tertile, across the course of their reproductive careers. These findings establish a link between males’ fitness and their associations with infants in the absence of kin discrimination or high paternity certainty, and suggest a strategy by which selection could generate more involved male parenting among non-monogamous species.
more »
« less
- PAR ID:
- 10426226
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Scientific Reports
- Volume:
- 8
- Issue:
- 1
- ISSN:
- 2045-2322
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
More Like this
-
-
AbstractThe social and mating systems of orangutans, one of our closest relatives, remain poorly understood. Orangutans (Pongospp.) are highly sexually dimorphic and females are philopatric and maintain individual, but overlapping home ranges, whereas males disperse, are non-territorial and wide-ranging, and show bimaturism, with many years between reaching sexual maturity and attaining full secondary sexual characteristics (including cheek pads (flanges) and emitting long calls). We report on 21 assigned paternities, among 35 flanged and 15 unflanged, genotyped male Bornean orangutans (Pongo pygmaeus wurmbii), studied from 2003 to 2018 in Tuanan (Central Kalimantan, Indonesia). All 10 infants born since mid-2003 with an already identified sire were sired by flanged males. All adult males ranged well beyond the study area (c. 1000 ha), and their dominance relations fluctuated even within short periods. However, 5 of the 10 identified sires had multiple offspring within the monitored area. Several sired over a period of c. 10 years, which overlapped with siring periods of other males. The long-calling behavior of sires indicated they were not consistently dominant over other males in the area around the time of known conceptions. Instead, when they were seen in the area, the known sires spent most of their time within the home ranges of the females whose offspring they sired. Overall, successful sires were older and more often resident than others. Significance statementIt is difficult to assess reproductive success for individuals of long-lived species, especially for dispersing males, who cannot be monitored throughout their lives. Due to extremely long interbirth intervals, orangutans have highly male-skewed operational sex ratios and thus intensive male-male competition for every conception. Paternity analyses matched 21 immature Bornean orangutans with their most likely sire (only 10 of 50 genotyped males) in a natural population. Half of these identified sires had multiple offspring in the study area spread over periods of at least 10 years, despite frequently ranging outside this area. Dominance was a poor predictor of success, but, consistent with female mating tactics to reduce the risk of infanticide, known “sires” tended to have relatively high local presence, which seems to contribute to the males’ siring success. The results highlight the importance of large protected areas to enable a natural pattern of dispersal and ranging.more » « less
-
The genes of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) are vital to vertebrate immunity and may influence mate choice in several species. The extent to which the MHC influences female mate choice in primates remains poorly understood, and studies of MHC-based mate choice in platyrrhines are especially rare. White-faced capuchin monkeys (Cebus imitator) reside in multimale-multifemale groups where alpha males sire most of the offspring, but females related to the alpha male reproduce with subordinate males. In this study, we investigated the potential role of MHC genotypes, in the context of social dominance and relatedness, in determining which mating pairs produced offspring in wild white-faced capuchins in the Sector Santa Rosa, Área de Conservación Guanacaste, Costa Rica. We found that neither the social status nor the siring success of males was associated with their MHC metrics. Using mixed conditional logit models and generalized linear models, we found that MHC metrics did not predict the probability of siring offspring or being an alpha male. Alpha males that were distantly related to reproducing females were significantly more likely to sire offspring regardless of MHC genotype. However, we did find some evidence that subordinate males heterozygous at MHC loci sired significantly more offspring than homozygous subordinate males. Further, one-sided binomial simulations revealed that offspring were more frequently heterozygous at MHC loci than expected given the gene pool. We conclude that in this population, females related to the alpha may preferentially mate with MHC-diverse subordinate males, leading to increased probabilities of MHC-diverse offspring.more » « less
-
Abstract Across animal taxa, females commonly mate with more than one male, even in monogamous mating systems. These extra-pair (EP) copulations and resulting young may increase the fitness of the female via a variety of mechanisms, including genetic benefits. North American chickadees provide an interesting system to study the role of sexual selection via EP paternity, because they are socially monogamous, nonmigratory birds that rely on spatial cognition to recover food stores and variation in spatial cognition is associated with increased survival, longer lifespan, and is heritable. Given spatial cognitive abilities are heritable and associated with direct survival benefits, these abilities may be under sexual selection if males with better spatial abilities sire more offspring and females prefer to mate with such males. We aimed to address these predictions by quantifying extra-pair paternity and comparing spatial abilities of EP males to those of the social male they cuckold in a wild population of mountain chickadees (Poecile gambeli). We found that 1. males with better spatial cognitive abilities have more EP young and produce heavier offspring in their own nests compared to their poorer performing counterparts, and 2. EP males have significantly better spatial cognition than the social males they cuckolded. These results suggest that sexual selection is involved in the evolution of spatial cognitive abilities in food-caching chickadees and are consistent with the good genes hypothesis, which posits that females gain indirect genetic benefits via EP young.more » « less
-
Behavioral traits are often the first response to changing environmental conditions, including human induced rapid environmental change. For example, animals living in urban areas are often more aggressive than rural animals. This is especially evident in songbirds; males of several species display elevated aggression in urban habitats. Increased male aggression has been associated with reduced parental care, but the consequences of this trade-off for males, social partners, and offspring in the context of urbanization remains unclear. We explored the effects of increased urban male aggression on the life history traits, parental care, and offspring outcomes of song sparrows (Melospiza melodia). We predicted that urban males would reduce paternal investment and result in urban females providing greater nestling care or reduced fledging success in urban habitats compared to rural. Contrary to our prediction, aggressive urban males did not decrease care but visited the nest more often compared to rural males. Additionally, urban birds had higher nest and fledging success compared to rural, though this was largely due to higher nest predation in rural habitats. Our study is among the first to evaluate trade-offs associated with elevated aggression expressed by urban animals and adds to a growing body of evidence that urban habitats provide benefits to some species.more » « less
An official website of the United States government

