Courant Research Centre Evolution of Social Behaviour, Georg August University, Göttingen, 37077 Göttingen, Germany.
Curr Biol. 2010 Dec 21;20(24):2207-10. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2010.10.058. Epub 2010 Nov 18.
For animals living in mixed-sex social groups, females who form strong social bonds with other females live longer and have higher offspring survival [1-3]. These bonds are highly nepotistic, but sometimes strong bonds may also occur between unrelated females if kin are rare [2, 3] and even among postdispersal unrelated females in chimpanzees and horses [4, 5]. Because of fundamental differences between the resources that limit reproductive success in females (food and safety) and males (fertilizations), it has been predicted that bonding among males should be rare and found only for kin and among philopatric males [6] like chimpanzees [7-9]. We studied social bonds among dispersing male Assamese macaques (Macaca assamensis) to see whether males in multimale groups form differentiated social bonds and whether and how males derive fitness benefits from close bonds. We found that strong bonds were linked to coalition formation, which in turn predicted future social dominance, which influenced paternity success. The strength of males' social bonds was directly linked to the number of offspring they sired. Our results show that differentiated social relationships exert an important influence on the breeding success of both sexes that transcends contrasts in relatedness.
对于生活在异性社交群体中的动物来说,与其他雌性形成紧密社交关系的雌性寿命更长,后代存活率更高[1-3]。这些关系具有很强的亲缘关系,但如果亲缘关系稀少[2,3],甚至在黑猩猩和马中,非亲缘关系的雌性之间也可能存在强烈的联系[4,5]。由于限制雌性(食物和安全)和雄性(受精)生殖成功的资源之间存在根本差异,因此有人预测,雄性之间的联系应该很少见,而且只存在于亲属之间和像黑猩猩这样的恋地雄性中[6] [7-9]。我们研究了分散的雄性阿萨姆长尾猕猴(Macaca assamensis)之间的社交关系,以了解多雄性群体中的雄性是否形成了差异化的社交关系,以及雄性是否以及如何从亲密关系中获得适应度收益。我们发现,紧密的联系与联盟的形成有关,而联盟的形成又预测了未来的社会主导地位,从而影响了亲代的成功。雄性社交关系的强弱与它们所生育的后代数量直接相关。我们的研究结果表明,差异化的社交关系对两性的繁殖成功率产生了重要影响,这种影响超越了亲缘关系的差异。