Wildlife Research Center, Kyoto University, Inuyama, Aichi, 484-8506, Japan.
Primates. 2022 Sep;63(5):483-494. doi: 10.1007/s10329-022-01004-1. Epub 2022 Aug 5.
Among non-human primates, male dominance rank is not necessarily a good indicator of mating success, and relationships between male dominance rank and mating or reproductive success are affected by female behavior and sexual states implying their probability of conception. Although comparisons of the behavior of male chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) and bonobos (Pan paniscus) suggest that the effect of male dominance rank on mating success is expected to be less prominent in bonobos, recent genetic studies have shown that high-ranking male reproductive skew is higher in bonobos than in chimpanzees. One possible reason for the higher reproductive skew in bonobos could be that female behavior and their sexual states may have much more influence on male mating and reproductive success in bonobos than in chimpanzees. In the current study on bonobos, we conducted focal animal observation of females and analyzed the influence of female sexual swelling, the number of days after parturition, and dominance rank of males on female associations, and copulation with adult males. Our results showed that females with maximum swelling (MS) had more proximity with high-ranking males and copulated more frequently with higher-ranking males than with lower-ranking males. Females for whom longer time had elapsed since parturition, and therefore had higher probabilities of conception, had 5-m proximity with adult males more frequently than females whom shorter time had elapsed since parturition, but did not have more copulation with adult males. Females with MS had proximity and copulated with high-ranking males frequently, which partly explains why the reproductive skew is so high in bonobos. These results are discussed in relation to previous hypotheses on the influence of long-lasting mother-son relationships on mating success of males and on the contribution of female receptivity during non-conceptive nursing periods to moderate intermale aggression in bonobos.
在非人类灵长类动物中,雄性支配等级不一定是交配成功的良好指标,雄性支配等级与交配或生殖成功之间的关系受到雌性行为和性状态的影响,这些因素暗示了它们的受孕概率。尽管雄性黑猩猩(Pan troglodytes)和倭黑猩猩(Pan paniscus)行为的比较表明,雄性支配等级对交配成功的影响预计在倭黑猩猩中不太明显,但最近的遗传研究表明,高等级雄性的生殖优势在倭黑猩猩中比在黑猩猩中更高。倭黑猩猩生殖优势更高的一个可能原因是,雌性行为及其性状态对雄性交配和生殖成功的影响可能比黑猩猩更大。在目前对倭黑猩猩的研究中,我们对雌性进行了焦点动物观察,并分析了雌性性肿胀、分娩后天数以及雄性支配等级对雌性关联和与成年雄性交配的影响。我们的结果表明,肿胀程度最大(MS)的雌性与高等级雄性更接近,与高等级雄性交配的频率也高于与低等级雄性。分娩后时间较长(因此受孕概率较高)的雌性与成年雄性的 5 米接近的频率高于分娩后时间较短的雌性,但与成年雄性的交配次数没有增加。具有 MS 的雌性频繁地与高等级雄性接近和交配,这部分解释了为什么倭黑猩猩的生殖优势如此之高。这些结果与之前关于母子关系对雄性交配成功的影响以及非受孕哺乳期间雌性接受能力对倭黑猩猩中等雄性攻击性的贡献的假设有关。