Exploring Social Dominance in Wild Diademed Sifakas (Propithecus diadema): Females Are Dominant, but It Is Subtle and the Benefits Are Not Clear

IF 1.2 4区 生物学 Q2 ZOOLOGY
Safidy M Rasolonjatovo, M. Irwin
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

Rarely observed in mammals, female dominance is documented in several of Madagascar’s lemurs. Although dominance affects many aspects of primates’ lives, studies have largely focused on dyadic agonistic interactions to characterise relationships. We explored the power structure of three diademed sifaka groups (Propithecus diadema) at Tsinjoarivo during the lean season (July-August, 325 h) using social behaviours, group leadership, displacements and feeding outcomes. Two groups had a hierarchy dominated by the breeding female, while the highest rank was held by the breeding male in the third; in dyadic interactions, breeding females dominated males in all groups. Inconsistencies in hierarchies suggest that groups vary, with rank related to kinship ties of breeders. Aggression and grooming were rare; adult females received aggression at lower frequencies than males. Group movements were led more by females and followed more by males, and female feeding priority was evident in displacements during feeding. However, males and females did not differ in feeding outcomes, as expected (particularly in the lean season) if female dominance (and/or male deference) serves to ensure better access for females. This unexpected pattern (female dominance despite rare aggression, clear female leadership and displacement, yet no observable benefit in grooming or feeding outcomes) defies easy explanation, and reinforces the fact that studies examining female power in lemurs should take a multifaceted approach. Further study is needed to understand this pattern, the physiological and reproductive consequences of female dominance (e.g. detecting subtler variation in food quality or intake rates) and exactly how (and when) the benefits of female dominance are manifested.
探索野生Diademed Sifakas(Propithecus diadema)的社会优势:雌性具有优势,但很微妙,其益处尚不明确
在哺乳动物中很少观察到,马达加斯加的几只狐猴中记录了雌性的优势地位。尽管支配地位影响灵长类动物生活的许多方面,但研究主要集中在二元痛苦互动上,以表征关系。在旱季(7月至8月,325小时),我们利用社会行为、群体领导力、流离失所和喂养结果,探索了Tsinjoarivo的三个二甲基sifaka群体(Propithecus diadema)的权力结构。两个群体的等级由繁殖雌性主导,而最高等级由第三个群体的繁殖雄性占据;在二元互动中,繁殖的雌性在所有群体中都占雄性的主导地位。等级制度的不一致表明,群体各不相同,等级与饲养者的亲属关系有关。攻击和打扮是罕见的;成年雌性受到攻击的频率低于雄性。群体运动更多地由女性主导,男性紧随其后,女性喂养优先在喂养期间的流离失所中表现得很明显。然而,正如预期的那样,如果雌性的优势(和/或雄性的尊重)有助于确保雌性更好地获得食物,雄性和雌性在喂养结果上没有差异(尤其是在旱季)。这种意想不到的模式(尽管有罕见的攻击性,女性有明确的领导权和流离失所,但在梳理或喂养结果方面没有明显的好处)难以解释,并强化了一个事实,即研究狐猴的女性力量应该采取多方面的方法。需要进一步的研究来了解这种模式、女性优势的生理和生殖后果(例如检测食物质量或摄入率的细微变化),以及女性优势的好处是如何(以及何时)表现出来的。
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来源期刊
Folia Primatologica
Folia Primatologica 生物-动物学
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
10.50%
发文量
36
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Recognizing that research in human biology must be founded on a comparative knowledge of our closest relatives, this journal is the natural scientist''s ideal means of access to the best of current primate research. ''Folia Primatologica'' covers fields as diverse as molecular biology and social behaviour, and features articles on ecology, conservation, palaeontology, systematics and functional anatomy. In-depth articles and invited reviews are contributed by the world’s leading primatologists. In addition, special issues provide rapid peer-reviewed publication of conference proceedings. ''Folia Primatologica'' is one of the top-rated primatology publications and is acknowledged worldwide as a high-impact core journal for primatologists, zoologists and anthropologists.
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