The costs of parental and mating effort for male baboons

Sexual selection theory predicts that males in polygynous species of mammals will invest more reproductive effort in mate competition than parental investment. A corollary to this prediction is that males will mount a stress response when their access to mates is threatened. Indeed, numerous studies...

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Veröffentlicht in:Behavioral ecology and sociobiology 2015-02, Vol.69 (2), p.303-312
Hauptverfasser: Cheney, Dorothy L., Crockford, Catherine, Engh, Anne L., Wittig, Roman M., Seyfarth, Robert M.
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container_issue 2
container_start_page 303
container_title Behavioral ecology and sociobiology
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creator Cheney, Dorothy L.
Crockford, Catherine
Engh, Anne L.
Wittig, Roman M.
Seyfarth, Robert M.
description Sexual selection theory predicts that males in polygynous species of mammals will invest more reproductive effort in mate competition than parental investment. A corollary to this prediction is that males will mount a stress response when their access to mates is threatened. Indeed, numerous studies have shown that males exhibit elevated stress hormones, or glucocorticoids (GCs), when their access to females, or a proxy to this access like dominance rank, is challenged. In contrast, the relationship between stress hormones and paternal eifort is less obvious. We report results from a study of wild male chacma baboons indicating that males experienced elevated GC levels during periods of social instability following the immigration of a dominant male. These effects were strongest in males whose mating opportunities were at greatest risk: high-ranking males and males engaged in sexual consortships. Males involved in friendships with lactating females, a form of paternal investment, also experienced high GC levels during these periods of instability. There was a tendency for males with lactating female friends to reduce their time spent in consortships during unstable periods, when the risk of infanticide was high. Thus, even in a highly polygynous mammal, males may have to balance paternal effort with mating effort. Males who invest entirely in mating effort risk losing the infants they have sired to infanticide. Males who invest in paternal care may enhance their offspring's survival, but at the cost of elevated GC levels, the risk of injury, and the loss of mating opportunities.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s00265-014-1843-3
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subjects Animal behavior
Animal Ecology
Animal reproduction
Behavioral biology
Behavioral Sciences
Biomedical and Life Sciences
Females
glucocorticoids
Health risks
Hormones
immigration
infants
interpersonal relationships
lactating females
lactation
Life Sciences
males
Mammals
Monkeys & apes
Offspring
Original Paper
Papio
prediction
progeny
risk
sexual selection
stress response
Zoology
title The costs of parental and mating effort for male baboons
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