Markham A Catherine, Santymire Rachel M, Lonsdorf Elizabeth V, Heintz Matthew R, Lipende Iddi, Murray Carson M
Center for the Advanced Study of Hominid Paleobiology, The George Washington University, Washington, D.C., U.S.A.
Department of Conservation and Science, Lincoln Park Zoo, Chicago, IL, U.S.A ; Committee on Evolutionary Biology, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, U.S.A.
Anim Behav. 2014 Jan;87:195-202. doi: 10.1016/j.anbehav.2013.10.031.
Given the deleterious consequences associated with chronic stress, individual differences in stress susceptibility can have important fitness implications. These differences may be explained in part by dominance status because high rank is typically associated with decreased aggression and improved nutrition. Here, we examined the relationship between dominance and social stress in lactating chimpanzees, , at Gombe National Park, Tanzania. We did so by pairing daily demographic and behavioural data with faecal glucocorticoid metabolite (FGM) concentrations collected over 37 months. While there was no main effect of rank, interesting differences emerged by adult subgroup size and adult sex ratio (males/females). We found that differences in FGM concentrations between high- and low-ranking females were most pronounced as adult subgroup size and sex ratio increased. Low-ranking females had higher FGM concentrations in larger subgroups and in subgroups biased towards adult males; we observed no comparable change in FGM concentrations amongst high-ranking females. Because low-ranking females were the recipient of significantly more male aggression relative to females of high rank, these patterns may be driven by psychosocial stress in low-ranking females. There was no significant change in diet quality across subgroup sizes; this finding suggests that nutritional stressors were not driving differences in female FGM concentrations. Being susceptible to social stress has important fitness implications as it may constrain low-ranking females from 'choosing' optimal subgroups to take advantage of food resources and/or for the socialization of their offspring.
鉴于慢性应激会带来有害后果,应激易感性的个体差异可能对健康状况产生重要影响。这些差异可能部分由等级地位来解释,因为高等级通常与攻击性降低和营养改善相关。在这里,我们研究了坦桑尼亚贡贝国家公园哺乳期黑猩猩的等级与社会应激之间的关系。我们通过将每日的人口统计学和行为数据与37个月内收集的粪便糖皮质激素代谢物(FGM)浓度进行配对来开展此项研究。虽然等级没有主效应,但按成年亚组规模和成年性别比(雄性/雌性)出现了有趣的差异。我们发现,随着成年亚组规模和性别比的增加,高等级和低等级雌性之间的FGM浓度差异最为明显。在较大的亚组和成年雄性占比偏高的亚组中,低等级雌性的FGM浓度更高;而在高等级雌性中,我们未观察到FGM浓度有类似变化。由于相对于高等级雌性,低等级雌性受到雄性攻击的次数明显更多,这些模式可能是由低等级雌性的心理社会应激驱动的。不同亚组规模的饮食质量没有显著变化;这一发现表明,营养应激源并非导致雌性FGM浓度差异的原因。易受社会应激影响对健康状况具有重要影响,因为这可能会限制低等级雌性“选择”最佳亚组以利用食物资源和/或让其后代进行社交。