Kappeler P M
Abteilung für Verhaltensforschung/Okologie, Deutsches Primatenzentrum, Göttingen, Germany.
Naturwissenschaften. 1999 Jan;86(1):18-29. doi: 10.1007/s001140050563.
Primate males have only recently returned to the center stage of socioecological research. This review surveys new studies that examine variation in the behavior of adult males and their role in social evolution. It is shown that group size, composition, and social behavior are determined not only by resource distribution, predation risk, and other ecological factors, but that life history traits and social factors, especially those related to sexual coercion, can have equally profound consequences for social systems. This general point is illustrated by examining male behavior at three levels: the evolution of permanent associations between males and females, the causes and consequences of variation in the number of males between group-living species, and the determinants of social relationships within and between the sexes. Direct and indirect evidence reviewed in connection with all three questions indicates that the risk of infanticide has been a pervasive force in primate social evolution. Several areas are identified for future research on male life histories that should contribute to a better understanding of male reproductive strategies and corresponding female counter-strategies.
灵长类雄性动物直到最近才重新成为社会生态学研究的核心对象。这篇综述调查了一些新的研究,这些研究探讨了成年雄性行为的差异及其在社会进化中的作用。研究表明,群体规模、组成和社会行为不仅由资源分布、捕食风险和其他生态因素决定,而且生活史特征和社会因素,尤其是与性胁迫相关的因素,对社会系统也可能产生同样深远的影响。通过在三个层面研究雄性行为,可以说明这一普遍观点:雄性与雌性之间永久关系的进化、群居物种间雄性数量变化的原因及后果,以及两性内部和两性之间社会关系的决定因素。与这三个问题相关的直接和间接证据表明,杀婴风险在灵长类社会进化中一直是一种普遍存在的力量。确定了几个未来关于雄性生活史的研究领域,这些研究应有助于更好地理解雄性生殖策略及相应的雌性应对策略。