Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8972144 | Animal Behaviour | 2005 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
In chacma baboons, Papio hamadryas ursinus, young adult males often rise to the top of the dominance hierarchy shortly after immigrating to a new group. Such events are potentially disruptive for pregnant and lactating females because high-ranking immigrant males often commit infanticide. In this preliminary study, we assessed the effects of upheavals in the male hierarchy on the physiology of 18 females in a baboon group living in the Moremi Game Reserve, Botswana. We collected behavioural and hormonal data to examine the effects of two separate events, a natal male take-over and an immigrant male take-over, on female faecal glucocorticoids (fGC). While few females had elevated fGC concentrations in response to the natal male take-over, following the immigrant male take-over there was a significant rise in fGCs, but only among lactating and pregnant females. Analysis of behavioural data indicated that elevated fGC concentrations were unrelated to male aggression towards females, female-female aggression, or rates of female-female grooming. Furthermore, lactating females with a male 'friend' during the immigrant male take-over period had a less marked increase in fGCs and lower fGC concentrations overall than females without a male friend. Taken together, these results suggest that male social instability itself does not necessarily elicit a stress response from females. Rather, it is the specific male that rises to the alpha position that prompts a stress response, and only from the females at risk for infanticide. Finally, females with a male friend may perceive themselves to be at a reduced risk of infanticide.
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Authors
J.C. Beehner, T.J. Bergman, D.L. Cheney, R.M. Seyfarth, P.L. Whitten,