Department of Anthropology, New York University, New York, NY, USA.
New York Consortium in Evolutionary Primatology, New York, NY, USA.
J Anim Ecol. 2020 Oct;89(10):2300-2310. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.13291. Epub 2020 Jul 26.
Traits that reflect the amount of energy allocated to offspring by mothers, such as infant body mass, are predicted to have long-lasting effects on offspring fitness. In very long-lived species, such as anthropoid primates, where long-lasting and obligate parental care is required for successful recruitment of offspring, there are few studies on the fitness implications of low body mass among infants. Using body mass data collected from 253 free-ranging rhesus macaque Macaca mulatta infants on Cayo Santiago, Puerto Rico, we examined if lower infant body mass predicts lower chance of survival through to reproductive maturation (4th year of life). We also used data on inter-birth intervals and suckling behaviours to determine whether the duration of maternal care was adjusted to infant body mass. Rhesus macaque infants experienced on average 5% reduced hazard of death for an increase in body mass of 0.1 SD (~100 g) above the mean within their age-sex class. The positive association between body mass and early life survival was most pronounced in the 1st year of life. Infant body mass tended to be lower if mothers were young or old, but the link between infant body mass and early life survival remained after controlling for maternal age. This finding suggests that maternal effects on early life survival such as maternal age may act through their influence on infant body mass. Mothers of heavier infants were less likely to be delayed in subsequent reproduction, but the estimated association slightly overlapped with zero. The timing of the last week of suckling did not differ by infant body mass. Using infant body mass data that has been rarely available from free-ranging primates, our study provides comparative evidence to strengthen the existing body of literature on the fitness implications of variation in infant body mass.
反映母亲为后代分配能量多少的特征,如婴儿体重,预计会对后代的适应度产生持久影响。在非常长寿的物种中,例如类人猿灵长类动物,成功招募后代需要长期和强制性的父母照顾,因此关于婴儿体重低对适应度的影响的研究很少。我们使用从波多黎各的圣胡安市的自由放养的恒河猴 Macaca mulatta 婴儿身上收集的体重数据,研究了较低的婴儿体重是否会降低其通过生殖成熟(第 4 年)的生存机会。我们还使用了关于出生间隔和哺乳行为的数据,以确定母亲的照顾时间是否会根据婴儿的体重进行调整。恒河猴婴儿的体重每增加 0.1 个标准差(约 100 克),其死亡风险就会平均降低 5%,而该标准差是其所在年龄-性别类别的平均值。体重与早期生存之间的正相关关系在生命的第一年最为明显。如果母亲较年轻或较年长,婴儿的体重往往较低,但在控制了母亲的年龄后,婴儿体重与早期生存之间的联系仍然存在。这一发现表明,母亲对早期生存的影响(例如母亲的年龄)可能通过其对婴儿体重的影响而发挥作用。体重较重的婴儿的母亲不太可能延迟后续繁殖,但估计的关联略微与零重叠。最后一周的哺乳时间与婴儿体重没有差异。使用从自由放养的灵长类动物中很少获得的婴儿体重数据,我们的研究提供了比较证据,以加强关于婴儿体重变化对适应度影响的现有文献。