Fitzpatrick Courtney L, Altmann Jeanne, Alberts Susan C
Department of Biology, Duke University, Durham, NC, USA; National Evolutionary Synthesis Center, 2024 W Main St. Suite A200, Durham, NC 27705-4667, USA.
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, USA; Institute of Primate Research, National Museums of Kenya, Nairobi, Kenya.
Behav Ecol Sociobiol. 2014 Jul 1;68(7):1109-1122. doi: 10.1007/s00265-014-1722-y.
Signals of fertility in female animals are of increasing interest to evolutionary biologists, a development that coincides with increasing interest in male mate choice and the potential for female traits to evolve under sexual selection. We characterized variation in size of an exaggerated female fertility signal in baboons and investigated the sources of that variance. The number of sexual cycles that a female had experienced after her most recent pregnancy ("cycles since resumption") was the strongest predictor of swelling size. Furthermore, the relationship between cycles since resumption and swelling size was most evident during rainy periods and was not evident during times of drought. Finally, we found significant differences in swelling size between individual females; these differences endured across cycles (i.e., were not explained by variation within individuals) and persisted in spite of ecological effects. This study is the first to provide conclusive evidence of significant variation in swelling size between female primates (controlling for cycles since resumption) and to demonstrate that ecological constraints influence variation in this signal of fertility.
雌性动物的生育信号越来越受到进化生物学家的关注,这一发展与对雄性配偶选择以及雌性特征在性选择下进化潜力的兴趣增加相吻合。我们描述了狒狒中一种夸张的雌性生育信号大小的变化,并研究了该变异的来源。雌性在最近一次怀孕后经历的性周期数(“恢复后的周期数”)是肿胀大小的最强预测指标。此外,恢复后的周期数与肿胀大小之间的关系在雨季最为明显,而在干旱时期则不明显。最后,我们发现个体雌性之间的肿胀大小存在显著差异;这些差异在各个周期中持续存在(即不能用个体内部的变异来解释),并且尽管存在生态影响仍持续存在。这项研究首次提供了确凿证据,证明雌性灵长类动物之间肿胀大小存在显著差异(控制恢复后的周期数),并表明生态限制会影响这种生育信号的变异。