Campbell Christina J
Department of Earth Sciences, Santa Monica College, Santa Monica, California, USA.
Am J Primatol. 2006 Dec;68(12):1197-201. doi: 10.1002/ajp.20305.
I report three cases of coalitionary aggression by adult male black-handed spider monkeys (Ateles geoffroyi) against subadult males within their community on Barro Colorado Island (BCI), Panama. Two of these cases were followed by the disappearance and presumed death of the victim. Similar behavior was recently reported by Valero et al. [in press], who suggested that this behavior may be the result of intense male reproductive competition. Like the single instance they reported, the cases I report all occurred when the operational sex ratio was approximately 1:1, which suggests that intense competition among males for access to reproductively viable females may be a contributing factor. Additionally the very low density of spider monkeys on BCI may play a significant role in the occurrence of this lethal aggression. Large numbers of adult males are not necessary to protect a territorial boundary against neighboring groups, and additional males may act merely as mating competition.
我报告了三起成年雄性黑掌蜘蛛猴(Ateles geoffroyi)在巴拿马巴罗科罗拉多岛(BCI)的社群内对亚成年雄性发动联合攻击的案例。其中两起案例发生后,受害者失踪并被推测死亡。Valero等人[即将发表]最近也报道了类似行为,他们认为这种行为可能是激烈的雄性生殖竞争的结果。与他们报道的单一案例一样,我所报告的案例均发生在实际性别比约为1:1时,这表明雄性为获得有生殖能力的雌性而进行的激烈竞争可能是一个促成因素。此外,BCI上蜘蛛猴的极低密度可能在这种致命攻击的发生中起重要作用。不需要大量成年雄性来保护领土边界免受邻近群体侵犯,额外的雄性可能仅仅是为了交配竞争。