Muller Martin N, Sabbi Kris H, Thompson Melissa Emery, Enigk Drew K, Hagberg Lindsey, Machanda Zarin P, Menante Ashley, Otali Emily, Wrangham Richard W
Department of Anthropology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM, U.S.A.
Department of Human Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, U.S.A.
Anim Behav. 2024 Jul;213:11-21. doi: 10.1016/j.anbehav.2024.04.002. Epub 2024 May 7.
Because senescence impairs the ability of older males to compete successfully for mates, male reproductive strategies are expected to change with age. The terminal investment hypothesis proposes that older males, who could die soon, should take greater risks to obtain mating opportunities. Another possibility is that older males avoid such risks, adopting alternative reproductive tactics, such as increased affiliation with females, increased reliance on coalitions or sexual coercion to continue to compete with younger animals. We tested these hypotheses in wild chimpanzees, , of the Kanyawara community, Kibale National Park, Uganda, where old males sire offspring at relatively high rates. Our data set included >40 000 incidents of male aggression and >5800 copulations observed between 2005 and 2017. We found that, even as their dominance status declined, old males maintained relatively high copulation rates, especially with established mothers. There was no evidence for terminal investment in response to ageing. Males became generally less aggressive as they aged. Neither did old males form affiliative bonds with females, nor use sexual coercion more frequently, as alternative reproductive tactics. Old males did, however, participate in coalitionary aggression at higher rates than young males and increased the proportion of their aggression that was coalitionary over time. Coalitions were positively associated with mating success, particularly for low- and middle-ranking males. These results support the hypothesis that ageing male chimpanzees use coalitions as an alternative reproductive tactic. The lack of evidence for terminal investment in response to ageing appears to reflect a broader mammalian pattern in which males who rely on fighting to secure mating opportunities avoid excessive risk taking as their formidability wanes.
由于衰老会削弱老年雄性成功竞争配偶的能力,因此预计雄性的生殖策略会随年龄而变化。终极投资假说提出,即将不久于人世的老年雄性应该冒更大的风险来获得交配机会。另一种可能性是,老年雄性会避免此类风险,采取替代性的生殖策略,比如增加与雌性的亲近度、更多地依靠联盟或性胁迫来继续与年轻雄性竞争。我们在乌干达基巴莱国家公园卡尼亚瓦拉社区的野生黑猩猩中对这些假说进行了验证,在那里老年雄性生育后代的比例相对较高。我们的数据集包括2005年至2017年间观察到的超过40000起雄性攻击事件和超过5800次交配行为。我们发现,即使老年雄性的主导地位下降,它们仍保持着相对较高的交配率,尤其是与已生育的雌性。没有证据表明衰老会导致终极投资。雄性随着年龄增长攻击性总体上会降低。老年雄性既没有与雌性形成亲密关系,也没有更频繁地使用性胁迫作为替代性生殖策略。然而,老年雄性参与联盟攻击的频率高于年轻雄性,并且随着时间的推移,它们联盟攻击行为在其攻击行为中所占的比例有所增加。联盟与交配成功率呈正相关,尤其是对中低等级的雄性而言。这些结果支持了衰老的雄性黑猩猩将联盟作为替代性生殖策略的假说。缺乏衰老会导致终极投资的证据似乎反映了一种更广泛的哺乳动物模式,即依靠争斗来确保交配机会的雄性会随着自身威慑力的减弱而避免过度冒险。