Allen Wild Connie, Yon Lisa
Centre for Research in Animal Behaviour, College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter, Exeter EX4 4QG, UK.
School of Veterinary Medicine and Science, University of Nottingham, Sutton Bonington LE12 5RD, UK.
Animals (Basel). 2024 Dec 13;14(24):3601. doi: 10.3390/ani14243601.
In recent decades, it has become apparent that during parturition events in a number of social mammals, social support behaviours from group mates can be directed to parturient females (and their newborn neonates). Such behaviour has been documented in diverse taxa, across non-human primates, , , and , living in a range of social group organisations, from matrilineal groups to cooperatively breeding groups and multi-male, multi-female groups. Since sociality, in association with parturition, has been demonstrated to confer several health benefits to human mothers and neonates, here, we also consider the potential adaptive significance of social support behaviours for other, non-human, social mammals. If appropriate social environments reduce a parturient female's dystocia risk and improve her responsiveness to her neonate following a successful birth, then the impacts of the peri-parturient social environment may ultimately have far-reaching impacts on the mother-neonate dyad's fitness. This seems a logical sequela since the health condition of a neonate at birth and the successful establishment of a strong maternal-neonate bond are often the most critical factors influencing mammalian offspring survival to independence. The principles of kin selection and alliance enhancement may serve to explain the fitness benefits to individuals who support group mates during their parturition and thus the selective advantage conferred to those exhibiting such behaviours. Older, multiparous females appear to hold a particularly important role in the assistance they can provide during the parturition of their group mates, given their greater level of experience of these events. Furthermore, a social birth may have an important influence on horizontal information transfer within a group. In particular, in long-lived, cognitively advanced social mammals (e.g., non-human primates, , ), witnessing birth events, early neonate responses, and maternal care, and engaging in allomaternal care with young neonates may be essential for nulliparous females' normal development. Such events may serve to prepare them for their own parturition and may improve their own parturition-related survivorship and that of their first-born offspring. Thus, it is vital that a better understanding is gained of the importance and salient features of social births in improving the health and survivorship outcomes for both the mother and her offspring in highly social species. The aim of this commentary is to assemble our current understanding of these highly interconnected themes. We suggest in the future, insights gained through observation of non-human social parturition in domestic and non-domestic species, by a wide and highly interdisciplinary range of stakeholders (including zookeepers, wildlife tourism guides, breeders of domestic animals, indigenous people, and ethologists), will be critical for enhancing our understanding of the influence of social environment on this rarely witnessed, yet highly important life event.
近几十年来,很明显在一些群居性哺乳动物的分娩过程中,群体成员的社会支持行为可以指向分娩的雌性动物(及其新生幼崽)。这种行为在不同的分类群中都有记录,涵盖了非人类灵长类动物、 、 以及 ,它们生活在一系列社会群体组织中,从母系群体到合作繁殖群体以及多雄多雌群体。由于社交性与分娩相关,已被证明能给人类母亲和新生儿带来多种健康益处,在此,我们也考虑社会支持行为对其他非人类群居哺乳动物的潜在适应性意义。如果合适的社会环境能降低分娩雌性动物的难产风险,并在成功分娩后提高其对幼崽的反应能力,那么围产期社会环境的影响最终可能对母婴二元组的适应性产生深远影响。这似乎是一个合乎逻辑的结果,因为新生儿出生时的健康状况以及牢固的母婴纽带的成功建立往往是影响哺乳动物后代存活至独立的最关键因素。亲缘选择和联盟强化原则可能有助于解释对在同伴分娩期间提供支持的个体的适应性益处,从而解释表现出此类行为的个体所具有的选择优势。年龄较大、经产的雌性动物在为同伴分娩提供帮助时似乎起着特别重要的作用,因为它们对这些事件有更丰富的经验。此外,社会性分娩可能对群体内的水平信息传递有重要影响。特别是在寿命长、认知能力强的群居哺乳动物(如非人类灵长类动物、 )中,目睹分娩事件、新生儿早期反应和母性照料,以及与新生幼崽进行异亲照料,可能对未生育的雌性动物的正常发育至关重要。这些事件可能有助于它们为自己的分娩做好准备,并可能提高它们自己以及其头胎后代与分娩相关的存活率。因此,至关重要的是要更好地理解社会性分娩在改善高度群居物种中母亲及其后代的健康和存活结果方面的重要性和显著特征。本评论的目的是汇总我们目前对这些高度相互关联主题的理解。我们建议在未来,通过广泛且高度跨学科的利益相关者群体(包括动物园饲养员、野生动物旅游导游、家畜饲养者、原住民和动物行为学家)对家养和非家养物种的非人类社会分娩进行观察所获得的见解,对于增强我们对社会环境对这一罕见但极其重要的生命事件的影响的理解至关重要。