Jr Research Group on Sexual Selection, Reproductive Biology Unit, German Primate Centre, Kellnerweg 4, Göttingen 37077, Germany.
BMC Evol Biol. 2012 Jun 18;12:89. doi: 10.1186/1471-2148-12-89.
Female signals of fertility have evolved in diverse taxa. Among the most interesting study systems are those of multimale multifemale group-living primates, where females signal fertility to males through multiple signals, and in which there is substantial inter-specific variation in the composition and reliability of such signals. Among the macaques, some species display reliable behavioural and/or anogenital signals while others do not. One cause of this variation may be differences in male competitive regimes: some species show marked sexual dimorphism and reproductive skew, with males fighting for dominance, while others show low dimorphism and skew, with males queuing for dominance. As such, there is variation in the extent to which rank is a reliable proxy for male competitiveness, which may affect the extent to which it is in females' interest to signal ovulation reliably. However, data on ovulatory signals are absent from species at one end of the macaque continuum, where selection has led to high sexual dimorphism and male reproductive skew. Here we present data from 31 cycles of 19 wild female crested macaques, a highly sexually dimorphic species with strong mating skew. We collected measures of ovarian hormone data from faeces, sexual swelling size from digital images, and male and female behaviour.
We show that both sexual swelling size and female proceptivity are graded-signals, but relatively reliable indicators of ovulation, with swelling size largest and female proceptive behaviours most frequent around ovulation. Sexual swelling size was also larger in conceptive cycles. Male mating behaviour was well timed to female ovulation, suggesting that males had accurate information about this.
Though probabilistic, crested macaque ovulatory signals are relatively reliable. We argue that in species where males fight over dominance, male dominance rank is surrogate for competitiveness. Under these circumstances it is in the interest of females to increase paternity concentration and assurance in dominants beyond levels seen in species where such competition is less marked. As such, we suggest that it may in part be variation in male competitive regimes that leads to the evolution of fertility signalling systems of different reliability.
女性的生育信号在不同的分类群中进化。其中最有趣的研究系统是那些多雄性多雌性群体生活的灵长类动物,雌性通过多种信号向雄性发出生育信号,而这些信号的组成和可靠性在不同物种之间存在很大差异。在猕猴中,一些物种表现出可靠的行为和/或肛门生殖器信号,而另一些则没有。这种变化的一个原因可能是雄性竞争机制的差异:一些物种表现出明显的性二态性和繁殖偏斜,雄性为争夺统治地位而争斗,而另一些物种则表现出低二态性和偏斜,雄性为争夺统治地位而排队。因此,等级作为雄性竞争力的可靠代表的程度存在差异,这可能会影响雌性可靠地发出排卵信号的程度。然而,在猕猴连续体的一端,选择导致了高的性二态性和雄性繁殖偏斜的物种中,缺乏关于排卵信号的数据。在这里,我们提出了来自 31 个周期的 19 只野生冠毛猕猴的数据,这是一个高度性二态性的物种,具有强烈的交配偏斜。我们从粪便中收集卵巢激素数据,从数字图像中收集性肿胀大小,并收集雄性和雌性行为数据。
我们表明,性肿胀大小和雌性接受性都是等级信号,但都是排卵的相对可靠指标,肿胀大小最大,雌性接受性行为最频繁的时间是在排卵附近。性肿胀大小在受孕周期中也更大。雄性交配行为与雌性排卵时间同步,这表明雄性对这一点有准确的信息。
尽管是概率性的,冠毛猕猴的排卵信号相对可靠。我们认为,在雄性为争夺统治地位而争斗的物种中,雄性统治地位等级是竞争力的替代指标。在这种情况下,雌性会增加优势雄性的父权集中和保证程度,超出在竞争不那么明显的物种中看到的水平。因此,我们认为,可能是雄性竞争机制的差异导致了生育信号系统可靠性的不同进化。