Di Fiore Anthony, Fernandez-Duque Eduardo, Hurst Delanie
Center for the Study of Human Origins, Department of Anthropology, New York University, New York, NY 10003, USA.
Folia Primatol (Basel). 2007;78(2):88-98. doi: 10.1159/000097059.
Sakis (genus Pithecia) commonly live in socially monogamous groups, but data from wild populations on group dynamics and on the turnover of reproductive-age animals are rare. Here we describe the replacement of the adult male in one group of sakis in the Ecuadorian Amazon following the death of the initial resident. We use 354 h of focal behavioral data to describe differences in the spatial relationships among group members before and after the replacement and to examine changes in the rate of male-to-female grooming, aggression, scent marking and vocalization. Interactions with extra group individuals within the group's home range were more frequent during and after the replacement than before. The presence of such additional animals during periods of reproductive turnover may explain at least some reported observations of saki groups with more than 1 reproductive-age male or female.
僧面猴(僧面猴属)通常以社会一夫一妻制群体生活,但来自野生种群的关于群体动态和生殖年龄动物更替的数据很少。在这里,我们描述了厄瓜多尔亚马逊地区一组僧面猴中成年雄性在初始居住者死亡后的更替情况。我们使用354小时的焦点行为数据来描述更替前后群体成员之间空间关系的差异,并研究雄性对雌性梳理、攻击、气味标记和发声频率的变化。在更替期间和之后,与群体活动范围内额外群体个体的互动比之前更频繁。在生殖更替期间出现此类额外动物,可能至少解释了一些关于僧面猴群体中存在不止一只生殖年龄雄性或雌性的报道观察结果。