Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany.
Evol Anthropol. 2018 Sep;27(5):218-233. doi: 10.1002/evan.21721. Epub 2018 Oct 16.
A focus of socioecological research is to understand how ecological, social, and life history factors influence the variability of social organization within and between species. The genus Gorilla exhibits variability in social organization with western gorilla groups being almost exclusively one-male, yet approximately 40% of mountain gorilla groups are multimale. We review five ultimate causes for the variability in social organization within and among gorilla populations: human disturbance, ecological constraints on group size, risk of infanticide, life history patterns, and population density. We find the most evidence for the ecological constraints and life history hypotheses, but an over-riding explanation remains elusive. The variability may hinge on variation in female dispersal patterns, as females seek a group of optimal size and with a good protector male. Our review illustrates the challenges of understanding why the social organization of closely related species may deviate from predictions based on socioecological and life history theory.
社会生态学研究的一个重点是了解生态、社会和生活史因素如何影响物种内和物种间社会组织的可变性。大猩猩属的社会组织具有可变性,西部大猩猩群体几乎完全是单雄的,而大约 40%的山地大猩猩群体是多雄的。我们回顾了导致大猩猩种群内和种群间社会组织可变性的五个终极原因:人类干扰、群体大小的生态限制、杀婴风险、生活史模式和种群密度。我们发现最有证据支持生态限制和生活史假说,但一个压倒性的解释仍然难以捉摸。这种可变性可能取决于雌性扩散模式的变化,因为雌性会寻找一个最佳大小的群体,并与一个优秀的保护雄性在一起。我们的综述说明了理解为什么亲缘关系密切的物种的社会组织可能偏离基于社会生态学和生活史理论的预测的挑战。