Victims of infanticide and conspecific bite wounding in a female-dominant primate: a long-term study

The aggression animals receive from conspecifics varies between individuals across their lifetime. As poignantly evidenced by infanticide, for example, aggression can have dramatic fitness consequences. Nevertheless, we understand little about the sources of variation in received aggression, particu...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2013-12, Vol.8 (12), p.e82830
Hauptverfasser: Charpentier, Marie J E, Drea, Christine M
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description The aggression animals receive from conspecifics varies between individuals across their lifetime. As poignantly evidenced by infanticide, for example, aggression can have dramatic fitness consequences. Nevertheless, we understand little about the sources of variation in received aggression, particularly in females. Using a female-dominant species renowned for aggressivity in both sexes, we tested for potential social, demographic, and genetic patterns in the frequency with which animals were wounded by conspecifics. Our study included 243 captive, ring-tailed lemurs (Lemur catta), followed from infancy to adulthood over a 35-year time span. We extracted injury, social, and life-history information from colony records and calculated neutral heterozygosity for a subset of animals, as an estimate of genetic diversity. Focusing on victims rather than aggressors, we used General Linear Models to explain bite-wound patterns at different life stages. In infancy, maternal age best predicted wounds received, as infants born to young mothers were the most frequent infanticide victims. In adulthood, sex best predicted wounds received, as males were three times more likely than females to be seriously injured. No relation emerged between wounds received and the other variables studied. Beyond the generally expected costs of adult male intrasexual aggression, we suggest possible additive costs associated with female-dominant societies - those suffered by young mothers engaged in aggressive disputes and those suffered by adult males aggressively targeted by both sexes. We propose that infanticide in lemurs may be a costly by-product of aggressively mediated, female social dominance. Accordingly, the benefits of female behavioral 'masculinization' accrued to females through priority of access to resources, may be partially offset by early costs in reproductive success. Understanding the factors that influence lifetime patterns of conspecific wounding is critical to evaluating the fitness costs associated with social living; however, these costs may vary substantially between societies.
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In adulthood, sex best predicted wounds received, as males were three times more likely than females to be seriously injured. No relation emerged between wounds received and the other variables studied. Beyond the generally expected costs of adult male intrasexual aggression, we suggest possible additive costs associated with female-dominant societies - those suffered by young mothers engaged in aggressive disputes and those suffered by adult males aggressively targeted by both sexes. We propose that infanticide in lemurs may be a costly by-product of aggressively mediated, female social dominance. Accordingly, the benefits of female behavioral 'masculinization' accrued to females through priority of access to resources, may be partially offset by early costs in reproductive success. Understanding the factors that influence lifetime patterns of conspecific wounding is critical to evaluating the fitness costs associated with social living; however, these costs may vary substantially between societies.</abstract><cop>United States</cop><pub>Public Library of Science</pub><pmid>24367560</pmid><doi>10.1371/journal.pone.0082830</doi><tpages>e82830</tpages><orcidid>https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6530-5874</orcidid><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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subjects Adults
Aggression
Aggressive behavior
Aggressiveness
Analysis
Animal behavior
Animals
Behavior, Animal - physiology
Biology
Bites and Stings
Breeding success
Competition
Conspecifics
Costs
Demographics
Dominant species
Female
Females
Fitness
Gender differences
Genetic diversity
Heterozygosity
Infanticide
Infants
Lemur - physiology
Lemur catta
Lemurs
Life history
Life Sciences
Male
Males
Primates
Reproduction
Reproductive fitness
Studies
Wounding
title Victims of infanticide and conspecific bite wounding in a female-dominant primate: a long-term study
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