Institute of Eastern-Himalaya Biodiversity Research, Dali University, Dali, Yunnan 671003, China; International Centre of Biodiversity and Primate Conservation, Dali University, Dali, Yunnan 671003, China; Collaborative Innovation Center for the Biodiversity in the Three Parallel Rivers of China, Dali, Yunnan 671003, China.
Administration of Baimaxueshan National Nature Reserve, Deqin, Yunnan 674500, China; Collaborative Innovation Center for the Biodiversity in the Three Parallel Rivers of China, Dali, Yunnan 671003, China.
Behav Processes. 2020 Dec;181:104248. doi: 10.1016/j.beproc.2020.104248. Epub 2020 Sep 19.
Birth attendance, or midwifery service, is an important characteristic in human evolution, and has been argued to separate our lineage from other taxa in the animal kingdom. Recent studies, however, indicate that similar or analogous behaviors also may occur in a small number of nonhuman primate species. Here, we report the first case of both male and female attendance and female birth assistance in a wild species of nonhuman primate, the black-and-white snub-nosed monkey (Rhinopithecus bieti). At our field site in Yunnan, China we observed a diurnal birth event in which the leader male of a one-male unit (OMU) remained in close- proximity (0-2 m) to the parturient, groomed her, and remained vigilant over a five hour pre- and postpartum period. In addition, a multiparous female member of the OMU also remained in close proximity to the soon-to-be mother, helped to pull the neonate from the birth canal, took the neonate from the new mother within 15 s of the birth, held the infant for 20 min, and then severed the umbilical cord. For the next several days the leader male traveled in close-proximity to the new mother and four days after the birth event, we observed him to share food with her. Given that diurnal births are extremely rare in this primate species; it remains unclear the degree to which the events we observed commonly occur during nighttime births. We argue that adult male and female black-and-white snub-nosed monkeys are highly attracted to young infants, and birth attendance and birth assistance in this, and certain other primate species, may play a critical role in maternal and infant survivorship.
分娩陪护,或助产服务,是人类进化的一个重要特征,有人认为这将我们与动物界的其他分类区分开来。然而,最近的研究表明,类似或类似的行为也可能发生在少数非人类灵长类物种中。在这里,我们报告了首例在野生黑白仰鼻猴(Rhinopithecus bieti)中同时出现雄性和雌性分娩陪护和雌性分娩协助的案例。在我们位于中国云南的野外研究点,我们观察到了一起昼间分娩事件,在这起事件中,一个一雄单元(OMU)的首领雄猴与分娩的雌猴保持近距离(0-2 米),为其梳理毛发,并在五小时的产前和产后期间保持警惕。此外,OMU 中的一只多产雌猴也与即将成为母亲的雌猴保持近距离,帮助将新生儿从产道中拉出,在出生后 15 秒内从新母亲手中接过婴儿,抱着婴儿 20 分钟,然后剪断脐带。在接下来的几天里,首领雄猴与新母亲保持近距离,在出生事件发生四天后,我们观察到他与她分享食物。鉴于在这种灵长类动物中昼间分娩极为罕见;我们尚不清楚在夜间分娩时我们观察到的事件发生的程度。我们认为,成年黑白仰鼻猴雄性和雌性对幼猴高度关注,在这种情况下以及某些其他灵长类物种中的分娩陪护和分娩协助可能对母婴生存至关重要。