Krützen Michael, Barré Lynne M, Connor Richard C, Mann Janet, Sherwin William B
School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of New South Wales, Sydney NSW 2052, Australia.
Mol Ecol. 2004 Jul;13(7):1975-90. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2004.02192.x.
Sexually mature male bottlenose dolphins in Shark Bay cooperate by pursuing distinct alliance strategies to monopolize females in reproductive condition. We present the results of a comprehensive study in a wild cetacean population to test whether male alliance membership is a prerequisite for reproductive success. We compared two methods for inferring paternity: both calculate a likelihood ratio, called the paternity index, between two opposing hypotheses, but they differ in the way that significance is applied to the data. The first method, a Bayesian approach commonly used in human paternity testing, appeared to be overly conservative for our data set, but would be less susceptible to assumptions if a larger number of microsatellite loci had been used. Using the second approach, the computer program cervus 2.0, we successfully assigned 11 paternities to nine males, and 17 paternities to 14 out of 139 sexually mature males at 95% and 80% confidence levels, respectively. It appears that being a member of a bottlenose dolphin alliance is not a prerequisite for paternity: two paternities were obtained by juvenile males (one at the 95%, the other at the 80% confidence level), suggesting that young males without alliance partners pursue different mating tactics to adults. Likelihood analyses showed that these two juvenile males were significantly more likely to be the true father of the offspring than to be their half-sibling (P < 0.05). Using paternity data at an 80% confidence level, we could show that reproductive success was significantly skewed within at least some stable first-order alliances (P < 0.01). Interestingly, there is powerful evidence that one mating was incestuous, with one calf apparently fathered by its mother's father (P < 0.01). Our study suggests that the reproductive success of both allied males, and of nonallied juveniles, needs to be incorporated into an adaptive framework that seeks to explain alliance formation in male bottlenose dolphins.
在鲨鱼湾,性成熟的雄性宽吻海豚会通过采取不同的联盟策略进行合作,以独占处于繁殖期的雌性。我们在一个野生鲸类种群中开展了一项全面研究,以检验成为雄性联盟成员是否是繁殖成功的先决条件。我们比较了两种推断父权的方法:这两种方法都计算两个对立假设之间的似然比,即父权指数,但它们在将显著性应用于数据的方式上有所不同。第一种方法是人类亲子鉴定中常用的贝叶斯方法,对于我们的数据集而言似乎过于保守,但如果使用更多的微卫星位点,它对假设的敏感性会更低。使用第二种方法,即计算机程序Cervus 2.0,我们分别在95%和80%的置信水平下,成功地将11次父权归属到9只雄性身上,以及将17次父权归属到139只性成熟雄性中的14只身上。看起来成为宽吻海豚联盟的成员并非获得父权的先决条件:两只幼龄雄性获得了父权(一只在95%的置信水平,另一只在80%的置信水平),这表明没有联盟伙伴的年轻雄性会采取与成年雄性不同的交配策略。似然分析表明,这两只幼龄雄性成为后代真正父亲的可能性显著高于成为其同父异母或同母异父兄弟姐妹的可能性(P < 0.05)。使用80%置信水平的父权数据,我们能够表明至少在一些稳定的一级联盟中,繁殖成功存在显著的偏差(P < 0.01)。有趣的是,有强有力的证据表明一次交配是乱伦行为,一只幼崽显然是由其母亲的父亲所生(P < 我们的研究表明,无论是联盟中的雄性还是非联盟中的幼龄雄性,其繁殖成功都需要纳入一个适应性框架,该框架旨在解释雄性宽吻海豚联盟的形成。