Variance in the reproductive success of dominant male mountain gorillas

被引:0
作者
Andrew M. Robbins
Maryke Gray
Prosper Uwingeli
Innocent Mburanumwe
Edwin Kagoda
Martha M. Robbins
机构
[1] Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology,Rwanda Development Board
[2] International Gorilla Conservation Program,Institut Congolais pour la Conservation de la Nature
[3] Parc National des Volcans,undefined
[4] Parc National des Virunga-sud,undefined
[5] Mgahinga Gorilla National Park,undefined
[6] Uganda Wildlife Authority,undefined
来源
Primates | 2014年 / 55卷
关键词
Brown partitions; Harem size; Infanticide; Intra-sexual competition; Male quality; Mate choice; Mating success; Offspring survival; Sexual selection;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Using 30 years of demographic data from 15 groups, this study estimates how harem size, female fertility, and offspring survival may contribute to variance in the siring rates of dominant male mountain gorillas throughout the Virunga Volcano Region. As predicted for polygynous species, differences in harem size were the greatest source of variance in the siring rate, whereas differences in female fertility and offspring survival were relatively minor. Harem size was positively correlated with offspring survival, even after removing all known and suspected cases of infanticide, so the correlation does not seem to reflect differences in the ability of males to protect their offspring. Harem size was not significantly correlated with female fertility, which is consistent with the hypothesis that mountain gorillas have minimal feeding competition. Harem size, offspring survival, and siring rates were not significantly correlated with the proportion of dominant tenures that occurred in multimale groups versus one-male groups; even though infanticide is less likely when those tenures end in multimale groups than one-male groups. In contrast with the relatively small contribution of offspring survival to variance in the siring rates of this study, offspring survival is a major source of variance in the male reproductive success of western gorillas, which have greater predation risks and significantly higher rates of infanticide. If differences in offspring protection are less important among male mountain gorillas than western gorillas, then the relative importance of other factors may be greater for mountain gorillas. Thus, our study illustrates how variance in male reproductive success and its components can differ between closely related species.
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页码:489 / 499
页数:10
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