Nuñez Chase L, Grote Mark N, Wechsler Michelle, Allen-Blevins Cary R, Hinde Katie
University Program in Ecology, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina.
Nicholas School of the Environment, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina.
Am J Primatol. 2015 Sep;77(9):963-973. doi: 10.1002/ajp.22426. Epub 2015 Jun 1.
Female mammals often begin to reproduce before achieving somatic maturity and therefore face tradeoffs between allocating energy to reproduction or their own continued development. Constraints on primiparous females are associated with greater reproductive failure, and first-born infants often have slower growth and greater mortality and morbidity than infants born to multiparous females. Effects of early life investment may persist even after weaning when juveniles are no longer dependent on maternal care and mother's milk. We investigated the long-term consequences of birth order in a large sample of rhesus macaques, Macaca mulatta, assigned to the outdoor breeding colony at the California National Primate Research Center (n = 2,724). A joint model for growth and mortality over the first three years of life allowed us to explicitly connect growth rates to survival. As expected, males are born heavier and grow faster relative to females. However, contrary to expectations, later-born males face substantially lower survival probability during their first three years, whereas first-born males survive at greater rates similar to both first-born and later-born females. Primiparous mothers are less likely to conceive during the subsequent breeding season, suggesting that their reproductive costs are greater than those of multiparous mothers. We speculate that compensatory tactics, both behavioral and physiological, of first-born offspring and their mothers, as well as the novel ecology of the captive environment, underlie these findings. The results presented here provide new insights into how maternal and infant life history tradeoffs may influence developmental trajectories even after the period of maternal dependence. Am. J. Primatol. 77:963-973, 2015. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
雌性哺乳动物常常在达到体成熟之前就开始繁殖,因此面临着将能量分配给繁殖还是自身持续发育的权衡。初产雌性面临的限制与更高的繁殖失败率相关,并且头胎婴儿往往比经产雌性所生的婴儿生长更慢,死亡率和发病率更高。即使在断奶后,当幼崽不再依赖母性照料和母乳时,早期生活投入的影响可能仍然存在。我们在加利福尼亚国家灵长类动物研究中心户外繁殖群体中的一大群恒河猴(猕猴属)样本(n = 2724)中,研究了出生顺序的长期影响。一个针对生命头三年生长和死亡率的联合模型使我们能够明确地将生长率与存活率联系起来。正如预期的那样,雄性出生时比雌性更重,生长也更快。然而,与预期相反的是,晚出生的雄性在其头三年面临的存活概率要低得多,而头胎雄性的存活率更高,类似于头胎和晚出生的雌性。初产母亲在随后的繁殖季节受孕的可能性较小,这表明她们的繁殖成本高于经产母亲。我们推测,头胎后代及其母亲的行为和生理补偿策略,以及圈养环境的新生态,是这些发现的基础。这里呈现的结果为母婴生活史权衡如何即使在母性依赖期之后仍可能影响发育轨迹提供了新的见解。《美国灵长类学杂志》77:963 - 973,2015年。© 2015威利期刊公司