Herdtle Annika, Duncan Chris, Manser Marta B, Clutton-Brock Tim
Large Animal Research Group, Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge, CB2 3EJ, United Kingdom.
Kalahari Research Centre, Kuruman River Reserve, Northern Cape, 8467, South Africa.
Behav Ecol. 2025 Mar 6;36(3):araf016. doi: 10.1093/beheco/araf016. eCollection 2025 May-Jun.
In many pair-living vertebrates, females commonly mate outside the pair bond, but when and why they do so is unclear. This behavior may stem from females seeking "good genes" or "compatible genes" from extra-pair mates superior to or less related than their partner. Variation in female ability to acquire extra-pair copulations, however, may also influence extra-pair paternity rates. We analyze 23 yr of parentage data to explore extra-pair paternity in wild Kalahari meerkats (), cooperative breeders where a single dominant pair monopolizes most reproduction in each group. When paired with a familiar breeding partner, females almost exclusively mate extra-pair to avoid inbreeding; however, even when paired with an unfamiliar male, extra-pair paternity still occurs. In our study of unfamiliar pairings, 14% of dominant female litters contained extra-pair paternity, with 90% of offspring sired by resident dominant males, 7% by extra-group males, and 3% by subordinate immigrant males. Results were not consistent with the compatible or good genes hypotheses: more closely related dominant pairs were not more prone to extra-group paternity; extra-group sires were not less related, heavier, or older than the resident dominant male; and offspring from extra-group matings did not demonstrate advantages over within-pair offspring. Extra-group paternity was more likely when dominant females were heavier, dominant males were lighter, more extra-group males visited, and few subordinate males resided in the group, suggesting extra-pair paternity rates are primarily driven by individual and social conditions. Whether females benefit from extra-pair paternity or simply mate with any available male remains unclear.
在许多成对生活的脊椎动物中,雌性通常会在配偶关系之外进行交配,但它们何时以及为何这样做尚不清楚。这种行为可能源于雌性从配偶关系之外的配偶那里寻求“优质基因”或“兼容基因”,这些配偶比其伴侣更优越或亲缘关系更远。然而,雌性获得配偶关系之外交配的能力差异也可能影响配偶关系之外的父权率。我们分析了23年的亲子关系数据,以探究野生喀拉哈里狐獴(一种合作繁殖动物,每个群体中单一的优势对垄断了大部分繁殖活动)中的配偶关系之外的父权情况。当与熟悉的繁殖伴侣配对时,雌性几乎完全在配偶关系之外交配以避免近亲繁殖;然而,即使与不熟悉的雄性配对,配偶关系之外的父权仍然会发生。在我们对不熟悉配对的研究中,14%的优势雌性产仔包含配偶关系之外的父权,其中90%的后代由常驻优势雄性所生,7%由群体外雄性所生,3%由从属移民雄性所生。结果与兼容或优质基因假说不一致:亲缘关系更近的优势对并不更容易出现群体外父权;群体外的父本与常驻优势雄性相比,亲缘关系并不更远、体重并不更重或年龄并不更大;群体外交配产生的后代也没有表现出比配偶关系内后代更具优势。当优势雌性体重更重、优势雄性体重更轻、有更多群体外雄性来访且群体中从属雄性较少时,群体外父权更有可能发生,这表明配偶关系之外的父权率主要受个体和社会条件驱动。雌性是否从配偶关系之外的父权中获益,或者只是与任何可用的雄性交配,仍不清楚。