Department of Anthropology, Tulane University, New Orleans, Louisiana 70118, USA.
Am J Primatol. 2012 Apr;74(4):359-65. doi: 10.1002/ajp.20974. Epub 2011 Jul 5.
White-faced capuchin males disperse from their natal group at around 4.5 years of age, but there is much variation in dispersal timing: our youngest confirmed disperser was 19 months and the oldest 11 years old. In this study, we investigate possible factors influencing dispersal decisions in this species. Between 1983 and 2010, 64 males were born into three study groups in Santa Rosa National Park, Area de Conservación Guanacaste, and Costa Rica. As of August 2010, 21 died or were presumed dead (<14 months), 13 remained natal residents, and 30 were presumed dispersers. We used backward logistic regression to identify proximate factors that predict the occurrence of male natal dispersal. The occurrence of a takeover (significant positive association) and group size (nonsignificant negative association) were included in the model. Male age, number of maternal brothers, and number of adult males were not significant predictors of natal dispersal. The resultant model correctly classified 97% of dispersed and 89% of resident natal males, for an overall success rate of 95%. The occurrence of a group takeover was the strongest predictor of male dispersal, with natal males being 18.7 times more likely to disperse in the context of a group takeover than during peaceful times. A linear regression model showed that the tenure length of a male's probable father influences the age of natal dispersal, explaining 15% of the observed variation in age. However, when our oldest disperser was removed (an outlier) this effect disappeared. Collectively, these results indicate that group instability, as evidenced by the occurrence of a takeover, shorter tenure length of a natal male's father, and smaller group size, triggers natal dispersal in this species while the converse leads to a delay. These data add to our growing evidence of the enormous impact that takeovers have on the behavioral ecology of this species.
白面卷尾猴雄性大约在 4.5 岁时离开其出生地群体,但分散时间有很大的变化:我们确认的最小分散者是 19 个月,最大的是 11 岁。在这项研究中,我们调查了影响该物种分散决策的可能因素。在 1983 年至 2010 年间,有 64 只雄性在圣罗莎国家公园、瓜纳卡斯特保护区和哥斯达黎加的三个研究群体中出生。截至 2010 年 8 月,21 只死亡或被认为死亡(<14 个月),13 只仍为出生地居民,30 只被认为是分散者。我们使用向后逻辑回归来确定预测雄性出生地分散的近因因素。接管的发生(显著正关联)和群体大小(无显著负关联)被纳入模型。雄性年龄、母亲兄弟数量和成年雄性数量不是出生地分散的显著预测因素。该模型正确地将 97%的分散雄性和 89%的出生居民雄性进行了分类,整体成功率为 95%。群体接管的发生是雄性分散的最强预测因素,在群体接管的情况下,出生地雄性分散的可能性是和平时期的 18.7 倍。线性回归模型显示,雄性可能父亲的任期长度会影响出生地分散的年龄,解释了观察到的年龄变化的 15%。然而,当我们去除最年长的分散者(一个异常值)时,这种影响就消失了。总的来说,这些结果表明,群体的不稳定性,如接管的发生、出生地雄性父亲任期较短以及群体规模较小,会触发该物种的出生地分散,而相反的情况则会导致延迟。这些数据增加了我们越来越多的证据,证明接管对该物种行为生态学的巨大影响。