Creighton Maria J A, Lerch Brian A, Lange Elizabeth C, Silk Joan B, Tung Jenny, Archie Elizabeth A, Alberts Susan C
Department of Biology, Duke University, Durham, NC, USA.
Department of Biology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
bioRxiv. 2024 Aug 20:2024.08.20.608854. doi: 10.1101/2024.08.20.608854.
Over the past few decades studies have provided strong evidence that the robust links between the social environment, health, and survival found in humans also extend to non-human social animals. A number of these studies emphasize the early life origins of these effects. For example, in several social mammals, more socially engaged mothers have infants with higher rates of survival compared to less socially engaged mothers, suggesting that positive maternal social relationships causally improve offspring survival. Here we show that the relationship between infant survival and maternal sociality is confounded by previously underappreciated variation in female social behavior linked to changes in reproductive state and the presence of a live infant. Using data from a population of wild baboons living in the Amboseli basin of Kenya - a population where high levels of maternal sociality have previously been linked to improved infant survival - we find that infant- and reproductive state-dependent changes in female social behavior drive a statistically significant relationship between maternal sociality and infant survival. After accounting for these state-dependent changes in social behavior, maternal sociality is no longer positively associated with infant survival in this population. Our results emphasize the importance of considering multiple explanatory pathways-including third-variable effects-when studying the social determinants of health in natural populations.
在过去几十年中,研究提供了有力证据,表明在人类中发现的社会环境、健康和生存之间的紧密联系也适用于非人类社会动物。其中一些研究强调了这些影响的早期生命起源。例如,在几种群居哺乳动物中,与社交活跃度较低的母亲相比,社交活跃度较高的母亲所生婴儿的存活率更高,这表明积极的母性社会关系会因果性地提高后代的存活率。在这里,我们表明,婴儿存活率与母性社会性之间的关系被先前未被充分认识到的雌性社会行为变化所混淆,这些变化与生殖状态的改变以及活婴的存在有关。利用来自肯尼亚安博塞利盆地野生狒狒种群的数据——在这个种群中,高水平的母性社会性先前与婴儿存活率的提高有关——我们发现,雌性社会行为中依赖于婴儿和生殖状态的变化推动了母性社会性与婴儿存活率之间具有统计学意义的关系。在考虑了这些依赖于状态的社会行为变化后,在这个种群中,母性社会性与婴儿存活率不再呈正相关。我们的结果强调了在研究自然种群健康的社会决定因素时考虑多种解释途径(包括第三变量效应)的重要性。