Pereira M E, McGlynn C A
Department of Biology, Bucknell University, Lewisburg, Pennsylvania 17837, USA.
Am J Primatol. 1997;43(3):239-58. doi: 10.1002/(SICI)1098-2345(1997)43:3<239::AID-AJP4>3.0.CO;2-Y.
Most lemurs yet studied in detail exhibit some mode of adult female social dominance over males. The known exception, a brown lemur subspecies known as rufous or redfronted lemurs (Eulemur fulvus rufus), forms multimale-multifemale social groups within which unambiguous dominance relations are not observed among adults. Resting groups of redfronted lemurs consistently include huddling adult male-female pairs whose males selectively scentmark and rub their heads in the scentmarks of their female huddling partners. Quantitative observations confirmed that some of these male-female pairs maintain special relationships satisfying all criteria originally developed in research on cercopithecine monkeys. Observations before, during, and after mating season, intergroup encounters, male transfers, and changes in male-female affiliations illuminated developmental and functional aspects of male-female partnerships. Each adult female in two semi-free-ranging study groups shared high rates of association, grooming, and agonistic support and low rates of agonistic interaction with one unrelated or distantly related adult male partner. Such affinity characterized small proportions of adult male-female relationships. Several males directed not only support but also aggression toward adult females with whom they sought to affiliate. All bonded males sought to copulate with their partners, and some appeared to ignore estrus in nonpartners. All females accepted copulation attempts from partners and some seemed to prefer their partners as mates. Partial synchronization of brief estrus periods together with concealed ovulation appeared to minimize chances for polygynous mating. Results support the view that the male-female pair is the fundamental social unit of E. fulvus and suggest that female partnership with individual males obviates dominance behavior, including female dominance, in this lemurid primate.
大多数经过详细研究的狐猴都表现出成年雌性对雄性的某种社会主导模式。已知的例外是一种棕色狐猴亚种,即红额狐猴(Eulemur fulvus rufus),它们形成多雄多雌的社会群体,在成年个体之间未观察到明确的主导关系。红额狐猴的休息群体中始终包括成年雌雄相拥的配对,其中雄性会有选择地留下气味标记,并在与其相拥的雌性伴侣的气味标记上摩擦头部。定量观察证实,其中一些雌雄配对维持着特殊关系,满足了最初在猕猴研究中确立的所有标准。在交配季节之前、期间和之后、群体间相遇、雄性迁移以及雌雄关系变化期间的观察,揭示了雌雄配对关系的发展和功能方面。在两个半放养的研究群体中,每只成年雌性都与一只无亲缘关系或远亲的成年雄性伴侣保持着高频率的关联、梳理毛发和争斗支持,以及低频率的争斗互动。这种亲密关系在成年雌雄关系中所占比例较小。一些雄性不仅对它们试图建立关系的成年雌性提供支持,还会表现出攻击性。所有结成伴侣的雄性都试图与它们的伴侣交配,有些似乎会忽视非伴侣雌性的发情期。所有雌性都接受伴侣的交配尝试,有些似乎更喜欢自己的伴侣作为配偶。短暂发情期的部分同步以及隐蔽排卵似乎将多配偶交配的机会降至最低。研究结果支持了这样一种观点,即雌雄配对是红额狐猴的基本社会单位,并表明在这种狐猴灵长类动物中,雌性与个体雄性的配对关系避免了包括雌性主导在内的主导行为。