非人类动物的优势和繁殖成功:跨物种比较

Lee Ellis
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引用次数: 544

摘要

本文更新和扩展了Dewsbury(1982)关于优势和繁殖成功(RS)的文献综述。其中包括大约700项研究的结果,其中超过三分之二的研究无法提供给Dewsbury。为了给出一个高度浓缩而又有意义的概述,主要发现用四个表来表示,一个表用于雄性非灵长类动物,一个表用于雌性非灵长类动物,一个表用于雄性灵长类动物,一个表用于雌性灵长类动物。在男性表格中,调查结果是根据六个不同的RS指标进行分析的,而在女性表格中,调查结果是根据八个RS指标进行分析的。在灵长类动物之外,有大量证据支持这样的假设,即地位高的雄性比地位低的雄性享有更高的RS。对于女性,支持高秩与RS正相关假说的研究与支持无显著秩与RS关系假说的研究更为均匀。这可能反映了女性之间等级关系较低的显著性,以及相对于男性而言,女性RS的变异性较低。在灵长类动物中,出现了一幅复杂的图景,尤其是在雄性动物中。这种复杂性在很大程度上是由于年龄和资历在影响支配地位方面的重要性。此外,在一些灵长类动物物种中,雌性对性伴侣的偏好似乎与雄性的统治地位无关,至少在交配发生的时候是这样。然而,大多数研究表明,高至中等地位的男性至少比最低地位的男性有轻微的终身生殖优势。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Dominance and reproductive success among nonhuman animals: A cross-species comparison

This paper updates and extends Dewsbury's (1982) review of the literature on dominance and reproductive success (RS). The findings from approximately 700 studies are included, over two thirds of which were unavailable to Dewsbury. In order to give a highly condensed and yet meaningful overview, the main findings are represented in four tables, one for male nonprimates, one for female nonprimates, one for male primates, and one for female primates. In the tables for males, findings are analyzed in terms of six different indicators of RS, and in the tables for females, in terms of eight RS indicators.

Outside the primate order, evidence largely supported the hypothesis that high-ranking males enjoy greater RS than do subordinate males. For females, studies are more evenly divided between those supporting the hypothesis that high rank and RS are positively correlated and those indicating no significant rank-RS relationship. This may reflect both the lower saliency of hierarchical relationships among females, as well as the lower variability in RS among females, relative to males.

Among primates, a complex picture has emerged, especially in the case of males. Much of the complexity appears due to the importance of age and seniority in affecting dominance rank. Also, in some primate species, female preferences for sex partners seem to have little to do with the male's dominance rank, at least at the time mating takes place. Nevertheless, the majority of studies suggest that high- to middle-ranking males have at least a slight lifetime reproductive advantage over the lowest ranking males.

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