一个更友好的“有点”社会系统:雄性有点狒狒投资于与雌性的长期社会关系。

IF 1.7 2区 生物学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY American Journal of Biological Anthropology Pub Date : 2025-01-21 DOI:10.1002/ajpa.25056
Anna H. Weyher, Marley Katinta, Benjamin Mubemba, Megan Petersdorf, Jason M. Kamilar, India A. Schneider-Crease, Kenneth L. Chiou
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:某些群居哺乳动物——包括许多灵长类动物——在交配后仍然表现出两性之间的从属关系。雌性和雄性狒狒(Papio sp.)之间的关系特别有特点。这些关系往往围绕着女性的生殖周期,通常是女性发起和维持的。类型化狒狒(类型化狒狒科)似乎在系统发育和行为上与其他狒狒有所不同。在这里,我们利用赞比亚卡桑卡国家公园9年的种群数据,通过描述雌性-雄性关系来评估Kinda狒狒的社会差异。方法:我们使用广义线性混合模型来评估个体和雌雄双体之间的梳理率和方向性,性别之间的接近模式和竞争行为的比率。我们检查了女性生殖状态的这些模式,并评估了二元关系随时间持续的程度。结果:我们发现金达狒狒的雌雄关系具有高度的雄性投入和低攻击性的特征,这种特征在雌性生殖状态和年龄中持续存在。我们发现雌性与单个雄性有强烈的联系,而雄性同时与多个雌性有强烈的联系。在与雌性的亲密关系中,雄性在很大程度上负责启蒙、梳理和接近,而成对通常会持续数年。讨论:我们的研究结果表明,Kinda狒狒代表了狒狒社会特征的马赛克,并且与最近关于其种群历史的基因组证据相结合,可能类似于祖先狒狒的表型。这扩展了我们对比较社会生态学的“狒狒模型”的理解,并强调了社会表型的高度可变性和进化性。
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A Friendlier “Kinda” Social System: Male Kinda Baboons Invest in Long-Term Social Bonds With Females

Objectives

Certain group-living mammals—including many primates—exhibit affiliative relationships between sexes that persist past copulation. Relationships between females and males in baboons (Papio sp.) are particularly well-characterized. These relationships tend to revolve around the female reproductive cycle and are generally female-initiated and female-maintained. Kinda baboons (P. kindae) appear to diverge phylogenetically and behaviorally from other baboons. Here, we assess how Kinda baboons differ socially by characterizing female–male relationships using 9 years of data on a population in Kasanka National Park, Zambia.

Methods

We used generalized linear mixed models to assess grooming rates and directionality for individuals and among female/male dyads, patterns of between-sex proximity, and rates of agonistic behavior. We examined these patterns across female reproductive states and evaluated the degree to which dyadic affiliations persisted over time.

Results

We find that female–male relationships in Kinda baboons are characterized by a high degree of male investment with low aggression that persists across female reproductive states and years. We find that females have strong affiliations with a single male while males have strong affiliations with multiple females at a time. Males are largely responsible for initiation, grooming, and proximity in affiliative relationships with females, and dyads often persist across years.

Discussion

Our results suggest that Kinda baboons represent a mosaic of baboon social features and, paired with recent genomic evidence about their population history, may resemble the ancestral baboon phenotype. This expands our understanding of the “baboon model” for comparative socioecology and emphasizes the high variability and evolvability of social phenotypes.

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