Key Laboratory of Resource Biology and Biotechnology in Western China, College of Life Sciences, Northwest University, Xi'an, China.
PLoS One. 2013 Jun 12;8(6):e65962. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0065962. Print 2013.
According to a biological market paradigm, trading decisions between partners will be influenced by the current 'exchange rate' of commodities (good and services), which is affected by supply and demand, and the trader's ability to outbid competitors. In several species of nonhuman primates, newborn infants are attractive to female group members and may become a desired commodity that can be traded for grooming within a biological market place. We investigated whether grooming was interchanged for infant handling in female golden snub-nosed monkeys (Rhinopithecus roxellana) inhabiting the Qinling Mountains of central China. R. roxellana exhibit a multilevel social organization characterized by over 100 troop members organized into 6-11 one-male units each composed one adult male and several adult females and their offspring. Behavioral data were collected over the course of 28 months on grooming patterns between mothers with infants less than 6 months old (N = 36) and other adult female troop members. Our results provide strong evidence for the interchange of grooming for access to infants. Grooming for infant access was more likely to be initiated by potential handlers (nonmothers) and less likely reciprocated by mothers. Moreover, grooming bout duration was inversely related to the number of infants per female present in each one-male unit indicating the possibility of a supply and demand market effect. The rank difference between mothers and handlers was negatively correlated with grooming duration. With increasing infant age, the duration of grooming provided by handlers was shorter suggesting that the 'value' of older infants had decreased. Finally, frequent grooming partners were allowed to handle and maintain access to infants longer than infrequent groomers. These results support the contention that grooming and infant handling may be traded in R. roxellana and that the price individuals paid for access to infants fluctuated with supply and demand.
根据生物市场范式,合作伙伴之间的交易决策将受到商品(商品和服务)当前“汇率”的影响,而“汇率”受供求关系和交易者竞价能力的影响。在几种非人类灵长类动物中,新生婴儿对雌性群体成员有吸引力,可能成为一种有价值的商品,可以在生物市场上用于换取梳理服务。我们调查了在中国中部秦岭地区栖息的川金丝猴(Rhinopithecus roxellana)中,梳理行为是否会因照顾婴儿而发生交换。R. roxellana 表现出多层次的社会组织,由 100 多名成员组成,分为 6-11 个一夫一妻制单位,每个单位由 1 个成年雄性和几个成年雌性及其后代组成。在 28 个月的时间里,我们收集了关于有 6 个月以下婴儿的母亲(N=36)与其他成年雌性群体成员之间梳理模式的数据。我们的研究结果提供了强有力的证据,证明了梳理行为可以换取接触婴儿的机会。为了获得接近婴儿的机会,梳理行为更有可能由潜在的照顾者(非母亲)发起,而母亲发起的可能性较小。此外,梳理回合持续时间与每个一夫一妻制单位中每个雌性的婴儿数量呈反比,这表明可能存在供求市场效应。母亲和照顾者之间的等级差异与梳理持续时间呈负相关。随着婴儿年龄的增长,照顾者提供的梳理时间会缩短,这表明年龄较大的婴儿的“价值”降低了。最后,频繁的梳理伙伴可以获得更长时间的照顾和接近婴儿的机会,而不频繁的梳理者则不行。这些结果支持了这样一种观点,即梳理行为和照顾婴儿可能在 R. roxellana 中进行交易,并且个人获得婴儿的价格随着供求关系的波动而波动。