Langergraber Kevin E, Rowney Carolyn, Crockford Catherine, Wittig Roman, Zuberbühler Klaus, Vigilant Linda
Department of Anthropology, Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts; Department of Primatology, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany.
Am J Primatol. 2014 Jul;76(7):640-8. doi: 10.1002/ajp.22258. Epub 2014 Jan 16.
Chimpanzees are frequently used to illustrate the relationship between sex differences in dispersal and sex differences in cooperation in primates and other group-living mammals. Male chimpanzees are highly philopatric, typically remaining in their natal communities for their entire lives to cooperate with related males in competition against less related males from other groups, whereas females typically disperse once at adolescence and cooperate with each other less frequently. However, there have been a few reports of dependent male offspring joining groups when their mothers transferred between communities as adults. Although such events are difficult to document, determining how often they actually occur is important for elucidating the links between philopatry, kinship, and cooperation in both chimpanzees and group-living animals more generally. Here we use genetic analyses to investigate a previous report of a large-scale transfer of many females and their offspring into the Sonso community of chimpanzees in the Budongo Forest Reserve, Uganda. Using autosomal microsatellite genotypes, we assigned a Sonso father to ten of the fourteen putative immigrants, and found that the four putative immigrants for whom we could not assign a Sonso father (perhaps due to incomplete sampling of all Sonso candidate fathers) nevertheless had Y-chromosome microsatellite haplotypes that were common in Sonso males but absent in males from four other chimpanzee communities at Budongo. These results suggest that these putative immigrant females and their offspring were probably actually long-term residents of Sonso whose identifications were delayed by their peripheral or unhabituated status. These results are consistent with other genetic and behavioral evidence showing that male between-community gene flow is exceedingly rare in east African chimpanzees.
黑猩猩常被用于阐释灵长类动物及其他群居哺乳动物在扩散方面的性别差异与合作方面的性别差异之间的关系。雄性黑猩猩高度恋家,通常一生都留在出生的群体中,与有亲缘关系的雄性合作,竞争来自其他群体亲缘关系较远的雄性;而雌性通常在青春期时就会扩散一次,彼此之间的合作频率较低。然而,有一些报道称,当成年雌性母亲在不同群体间转移时,其依赖母亲的雄性后代会加入新群体。尽管此类事件难以记录,但确定它们实际发生的频率对于阐明黑猩猩以及更广泛的群居动物在恋家、亲缘关系和合作之间的联系非常重要。在此,我们利用基因分析来研究之前一份关于许多雌性及其后代大规模转移至乌干达布东戈森林保护区黑猩猩桑索群体的报告。通过常染色体微卫星基因型,我们为14只疑似移民中的10只确定了桑索群体的父亲,并且发现,我们无法确定桑索群体父亲的4只疑似移民(可能是由于对所有桑索群体候选父亲的采样不完整),其Y染色体微卫星单倍型在桑索群体雄性中很常见,但在布东戈其他4个黑猩猩群体的雄性中却不存在。这些结果表明,这些疑似移民雌性及其后代可能实际上是桑索群体的长期居民,只是由于它们处于边缘或未习惯状态,身份识别有所延迟。这些结果与其他基因和行为证据一致,表明在东非黑猩猩中,群体间的雄性基因流动极其罕见。