Maestripieri Dario, Georgiev Alexander V
University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois.
Am J Primatol. 2016 Jan;78(1):92-105. doi: 10.1002/ajp.22368. Epub 2015 Jan 16.
Research with the rhesus macaque population on Cayo Santiago can provide a unique perspective on the costs of sociality and reproduction in primates. Because the Cayo macaques live in unusually large groups and in a predator-free environment, in which their artificial food source lacks seasonal variation in abundance or quality, these monkeys constitute a semi-experimental study of the costs and benefits of group living. Here we review several long- and short-term studies that have focused on female life history and stress physiology. Long-term demographic data have shown that rhesus macaque females of middle- and low-ranking matrilines have lower adult survival probabilities than females of high-ranking matrilines. Costs of reproductive effort are also evident: adult females were more likely to die during the birth than during the mating season and they experienced higher cortisol levels when lactating. Lower-ranking females, in particular, experienced greater relative increase in cortisol production during lactation, in comparison to middle- and high-ranking females. Older high-ranking females had lower plasma cortisol levels than younger ones but cortisol levels were similarly high among young and old middle- and low-ranking females. Higher plasma cortisol levels and/or fecal glucocorticoid concentrations are associated with higher plasma concentrations of some proinflammatory cytokines. High cortisol, in turn, may be associated with chronic inflammation, and perhaps also with immunosuppression. In sum, the studies reviewed here provide multiple lines of evidence that sociality and reproductive effort impose measurable costs on female rhesus macaques. In line with socio-ecological theory, female dominance rank consistently emerges as an important modulator of variation in female life histories and physiology. The Cayo Santiago macaques are therefore a valuable model for elucidating the mechanisms by which within-group competition and reproduction impact health and survival in nonhuman primates and in humans.
对圣地亚哥岛上的恒河猴种群进行研究,可以为了解灵长类动物社交和繁殖的代价提供独特视角。由于岛上的猕猴生活在异常庞大的群体中,且处于无捕食者的环境,其人工食物来源在数量或质量上没有季节性变化,这些猴子构成了群体生活成本与收益的半实验性研究对象。在此,我们回顾了几项关注雌性生活史和应激生理学的长期及短期研究。长期人口统计数据表明,中低等级母系的恒河猴雌性成年后的存活概率低于高等级母系的雌性。繁殖努力的代价也很明显:成年雌性在分娩时比在交配季节更易死亡,且哺乳期皮质醇水平更高。尤其是低等级雌性,与中高等级雌性相比,哺乳期皮质醇分泌的相对增加幅度更大。年长的高等级雌性血浆皮质醇水平低于年轻雌性,但年轻和年老的中低等级雌性皮质醇水平同样较高。较高的血浆皮质醇水平和/或粪便糖皮质激素浓度与某些促炎细胞因子的较高血浆浓度相关。反过来,高皮质醇可能与慢性炎症有关,或许还与免疫抑制有关。总之,这里所回顾的研究提供了多条证据,表明社交和繁殖努力给雌性恒河猴带来了可衡量的代价。与社会生态理论一致,雌性优势等级始终是雌性生活史和生理变化的重要调节因素。因此,圣地亚哥岛猕猴是一个有价值的模型,可用于阐明群体内竞争和繁殖影响非人类灵长类动物及人类健康与生存的机制。