Department of Primatology, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Deutscher Platz 6, D-04103 Leipzig, Germany.
School of Human Evolution and Social Change, Arizona State University, P.O. Box 872402, Tempe, AZ 85287-2402, USA.
J Hum Evol. 2019 Feb;127:81-92. doi: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2018.09.003. Epub 2019 Jan 21.
Long-term male-female bonds and bi-parental investment in offspring are hallmarks of human society. A key question is how these traits evolved from the polygynandrously mating multimale multifemale society that likely characterized the Pan-Homo ancestor. In all three species of savanna baboons, lactating females form strong ties (sometimes called "friendships") with one or more adult males. For yellow baboons (Papio cynocephalus) and chacma baboons (Papio ursinus), several lines of evidence suggest that these relationships are a form of male parenting effort. In olive baboons (Papio anubis), females are thought to preferentially mate with their "friends", and male-female bonds may thus function as a form of mating effort. Here, we draw on behavioral and genetic data to evaluate the factors that shape male-female relationships in a well-studied population of olive baboons. We find support for the parenting effort hypothesis in that sires have stronger bonds with their infants' mothers than do other males. These bonds sometimes persist past weaning age and, in many cases, the sire of the previous infant is still a close partner of the female when she nurses her subsequent offspring. We find that males who have the strongest bonds with females that have resumed cycling, but are not currently sexually receptive, are more likely to sire the female's next offspring but the estimate is associated with large statistical uncertainty. We also find that in over one third of the cases, a female's successive infants were sired by the same male. Thus, in olive baboons, the development of stable breeding bonds and paternal investment seem to be grounded in the formation of close ties between males and anestrous females. However, other factors such as male dominance rank also influence paternity success and may preclude stability of these bonds to the extent found in human societies.
长期的雌雄伴侣关系和双亲对子代的投资是人类社会的标志。一个关键问题是,这些特征是如何从可能是泛人类祖先的多配偶多雄性-多雌性社会进化而来的。在所有三种热带草原狒狒中,哺乳期的雌性与一个或多个成年雄性形成紧密的联系(有时称为“友谊”)。对于黄狒狒(Papio cynocephalus)和山魈(Papio ursinus),有几条证据表明,这些关系是雄性育儿努力的一种形式。在橄榄狒狒(Papio anubis)中,雌性被认为优先与它们的“朋友”交配,因此雌雄关系可能是一种交配努力。在这里,我们利用行为和遗传数据来评估在一个经过充分研究的橄榄狒狒种群中塑造雌雄关系的因素。我们发现,父亲与婴儿的母亲的关系比其他雄性更紧密,这支持了育儿努力的假设。这些关系有时会持续到断奶后,在许多情况下,前一个婴儿的父亲仍然是女性哺乳后续后代时的亲密伴侣。我们发现,与正在恢复发情但尚未性接受的雌性关系最紧密的雄性,更有可能成为雌性的下一任后代的父亲,但估计值存在较大的统计不确定性。我们还发现,在三分之一以上的情况下,一个雌性的连续婴儿是由同一个雄性生育的。因此,在橄榄狒狒中,稳定的繁殖纽带和父爱投资的发展似乎是基于雄性和静止雌性之间紧密联系的形成。然而,其他因素,如雄性支配地位等级,也会影响父权成功,并可能在一定程度上排除这些纽带的稳定性,使其无法与人类社会中发现的稳定性相媲美。