Department of Anthropology, Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America.
Department of Natural Resources and the Environment, University of New Hampshire, Durham, New Hampshire, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2024 Feb 9;19(2):e0296688. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0296688. eCollection 2024.
Male orangutans (Pongo spp.) exhibit bimaturism, an alternative reproductive tactic, with flanged and unflanged males displaying two distinct morphological and behavioral phenotypes. Flanged males are larger than unflanged males and display secondary sexual characteristics which unflanged males lack. The evolutionary explanation for alternative reproductive tactics in orangutans remains unclear because orangutan paternity studies to date have been from sites with ex-captive orangutans, provisioning via feeding stations and veterinary care, or that lack data on the identity of mothers. Here we demonstrate, using the first long-term paternity data from a site free of these limitations, that alternative reproductive tactics in orangutans are condition-dependent, not frequency-dependent. We found higher reproductive success by flanged males than by unflanged males, a pattern consistent with other Bornean orangutan (Pongo pygmaeus) paternity studies. Previous paternity studies disagree on the degree of male reproductive skew, but we found low reproductive skew among flanged males. We compare our findings and previous paternity studies from both Bornean and Sumatran orangutans (Pongo abelii) to understand why these differences exist, examining the possible roles of species differences, ecology, and human intervention. Additionally, we use long-term behavioral data to demonstrate that while flanged males can displace unflanged males in association with females, flanged males are unable to keep other males from associating with a female, and thus they are unable to completely mate guard females. Our results demonstrate that alternative reproductive tactics in Bornean orangutans are condition-dependent, supporting the understanding that the flanged male morph is indicative of good condition. Despite intense male-male competition and direct sexual coercion by males, female mate choice is effective in determining reproductive outcomes in this population of wild orangutans.
雄性猩猩(Pongo spp.)表现出二态性,这是一种替代生殖策略,有獠牙和无獠牙的雄性表现出两种截然不同的形态和行为表型。有獠牙的雄性比无獠牙的雄性大,并表现出无獠牙雄性所缺乏的第二性特征。猩猩替代生殖策略的进化解释仍然不清楚,因为迄今为止的猩猩亲子关系研究来自于有圈养猩猩的地点、通过喂食站和兽医护理提供食物,或者缺乏关于母亲身份的数据。在这里,我们利用第一个来自没有这些限制的地点的长期亲子关系数据表明,猩猩的替代生殖策略是依赖于条件的,而不是依赖于频率的。我们发现有獠牙的雄性比无獠牙的雄性有更高的繁殖成功率,这种模式与其他婆罗洲猩猩(Pongo pygmaeus)的亲子关系研究一致。以前的亲子关系研究对雄性生殖偏斜程度存在分歧,但我们发现有獠牙的雄性生殖偏斜程度较低。我们比较了我们的发现和以前来自婆罗洲和苏门答腊猩猩(Pongo abelii)的亲子关系研究,以了解为什么存在这些差异,考察了物种差异、生态学和人类干预的可能作用。此外,我们利用长期的行为数据表明,虽然有獠牙的雄性可以在与雌性相关联的情况下驱逐无獠牙的雄性,但有獠牙的雄性无法阻止其他雄性与雌性相关联,因此它们无法完全保护雌性免受其他雄性的交配。我们的研究结果表明,婆罗洲猩猩的替代生殖策略是依赖于条件的,支持了这样一种理解,即有獠牙的雄性形态表明了良好的条件。尽管雄性之间存在激烈的竞争和雄性的直接性胁迫,但在这个野生猩猩种群中,雌性的交配选择仍然有效地决定了繁殖结果。