在几内亚狒狒的多级社会中,肉类转移遵循社会关系,但与雄性繁殖成功率无关

William J O'Hearn, Christof Neumann, Federica Dal Pesco, Roger Mundry, Julia Fischer
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摘要

在人类的狩猎社会中,狩猎技能是与繁殖成功密切相关的雄性品质信号,因为它可以为家庭、相关家庭和更广泛的社区提供食物。然而,在其他灵长类动物中,捕获或分享猎物与雄性繁殖成功之间的关系在很大程度上仍未得到探讨。我们将几内亚狒狒的多层次社会与人类的觅食社会相比较,结合了109次食肉事件的记录和9年的行为数据,检验了获取和分享肉类更频繁的雄性在其社会单位中是否比其他雄性拥有更多的雌性,且持续时间更长。我们进一步检验了肉类转移类型随社会关系而变化的假设。我们没有发现任何证据表明,雌性更愿意加入或在更频繁获取或分享肉类的雄性的单位中停留更长时间。因此,狩猎技能似乎并不代表雄性的品质。然而,肉类转移更有可能发生在社会关系较强的地方,就像人类的狩猎社会一样。在社会底层,容忍性的肉类转移最为常见,而在社会上层,容忍性则逐渐降低。我们的研究结果表明了社会组织对可共享资源流动的跨物种影响。
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Meat transfers follow social ties in the multi-level society of Guinea baboons but are not related to male reproductive success
In human foraging societies, hunting skill is a male quality signal closely tied to reproductive success, because it serves to provision the family, connected households, and the wider community. However, the relationship between catching or sharing prey and male reproductive success remains largely unexplored in other primate taxa. Using the multi-level society of Guinea baboons as a parallel for human foraging societies, we combined records of 109 meat-eating events with nine years of behavioural data to test whether males who acquire and share meat more frequently have more females in their social units and for longer than other males. We further tested the hypothesis that the type of meat transfer varies with social ties. We found no evidence that females preferred to join or remain longer in the units of males who acquired or shared meat more frequently. Thus, hunting skills do not appear to signal male quality. However, meat transfers were more likely to occur along stronger social relationships, as in human foraging societies. Tolerant forms of transfer were most common at society's base, decreasing in tolerance at upper social levels. Our results demonstrate the cross-taxa influence of social organisation on the movement of sharable resources.
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