Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, 621 Young Drive South, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1606, USA.
College of the Atlantic, Bar Harbor, ME 04260, USA.
Horm Behav. 2019 Nov;116:104577. doi: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2019.104577. Epub 2019 Sep 27.
While it is generally accepted that social isolation has detrimental effects on social species, little is known about the importance of social interactions in less social species-particularly for wild reproductive females. We studied socially-flexible yellow-bellied marmots (Marmota flaviventer) and asked whether features of the social environment are associated with maternal fecal glucocorticoid metabolite (FGM) concentrations. Since changes in maternal baseline glucocorticoids may have positive or negative consequences for offspring fitness, we were also interested in estimating their relationship with measures of reproductive success. We fitted generalized linear mixed effects models to a dataset including maternal FGM measurements, social network metrics, maternal/alloparental care, and pup FGM and survival. Agonistic interactions were positively associated with maternal FGM levels, while mothers that engaged in relatively more affiliative interactions had reduced FGM levels when living in environments with low predator pressure. Pups associated with mothers exhibiting high FGM levels had low annual survival rates, received less maternal/alloparental care and had higher FGM levels. Interestingly, offspring from mothers with high FGM levels were more likely to survive the summer when born in small litters. In sum, social interactions likely influence and are influenced by glucocorticoid levels of facultatively social females. Potential benefits of social bonds may be context-specific, and agonistic interactions may be tightly correlated with fitness. Female marmots exhibiting high FGM levels had overall low reproductive success, which is predicted by the cort-fitness hypothesis. However, under adverse conditions, offspring summer survival can be maximized if pups are born in small litters.
虽然人们普遍认为社交隔离对社交物种有不利影响,但对于社交互动在非社交物种中的重要性知之甚少——尤其是对于野生繁殖的雌性动物。我们研究了社交灵活的黄腹旱獭(Marmota flaviventer),并探讨了社会环境特征是否与母体粪便皮质激素代谢物(FGM)浓度有关。由于母体基础皮质激素的变化可能对后代的适应性有积极或消极的影响,我们还对其与繁殖成功率的衡量标准的关系感兴趣。我们拟合了广义线性混合效应模型,该模型包含母体 FGM 测量值、社会网络指标、母体/ 养母照顾以及幼仔 FGM 和存活率。竞争互动与母体 FGM 水平呈正相关,而在捕食者压力较低的环境中,与参与相对更多亲善互动的母亲生活在一起的母亲的 FGM 水平则降低。与表现出高 FGM 水平的母亲相关联的幼仔的年存活率较低,获得的母性/养母照顾较少,且 FGM 水平较高。有趣的是,当出生在较小的窝中时,来自 FGM 水平较高的母亲的后代更有可能在夏季存活下来。总之,社交互动可能会影响并受到社交型雌性动物皮质醇水平的影响。社会联系的潜在好处可能是特定情境的,而竞争互动可能与适应性紧密相关。表现出高 FGM 水平的雌性旱獭总体繁殖成功率较低,这符合皮质醇-适应性假说的预测。然而,在不利条件下,如果幼仔出生在较小的窝中,夏季幼仔的存活率可以最大化。