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Modeling the Origins of Primate Sociality: Kin Recognition in Mouse Lemurs.

机译:建模灵长类动物社会的起源:小鼠狐猴的亲缘识别。

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摘要

Arguments of human uniqueness emphasize our complex sociality, unusual cognitive capacities, and language skills, but the timing of the origin of these abilities and their evolutionary causes remain unsolved. Though not unique to primates, kin-biased sociality was key to the success of the primate order. In contrast to ancestral solitary mammals, the earliest primates are thought to have maintained dispersed (non-group living) social networks, communicating over distances via vocalizations and scent marks. If such ancestral primates recognized kin, those networks may have facilitated the evolution of kin-biased sociality in the primate order and created selection for increased cognitive and communicative abilities. I used the gray mouse lemur (Microcebus murinus) to model whether vocalizations could have facilitated matrilineal and patrilineal kin recognition in ancestral primates. Much like mouse lemurs today, ancestral primates are thought to have been small-bodied, nocturnal creatures that captured insects and foraged for fruit in the thin, terminal ends of tree branches. Thus, the mouse lemur is an excellent model species because its ecological niche is likely to be similar to that of ancestral primates 55--90 million years ago. I conducted playback experiments in Ankarafantsika National Park, Madagascar testing whether mouse lemur agonistic calls contain matrilineal kin signatures and whether the lemurs recognize matrilineal kin. In contrast to large-brained, socially complex monkeys with frequent coalitionary behavior, mouse lemurs did not react differently to the agonistic calls of matrilineal kin and nonkin, though moderate signatures were present in the calls. I tested for patrilineal signatures and patrilineal kin recognition via mating and alarm calls in a colony with known pedigree relationships. The results are the first to demonstrate that a nocturnal, solitary foraging mammal gives mating calls with patrilineal signatures and recognizes patrilineal kin. Interestingly, alarm calls did not have signatures and did not facilitate kin recognition, suggesting that selection for kin recognition is stronger in some call types than others. As this dissertation is the first investigation of vocal kin recognition in a dispersed-living, nocturnal strepsirrhine primate, it greatly advances our knowledge of the role of vocal communication in the evolution of primate social complexity.
机译:关于人类独特性的争论强调了我们复杂的社交性,非同寻常的认知能力和语言技能,但这些能力的起源时间及其演变原因尚未解决。尽管并非灵长类独有,但亲缘社会性是灵长类秩序成功的关键。与祖先孤独的哺乳动物相反,最早的灵长类动物被认为维持分散的(非群体生活的)社交网络,通过发声和气味标记远距离交流。如果这样的祖先灵长类动物认识亲戚,那么这些网络可能促进了以灵长类动物为首的亲属社会化的发展,并为增强的认知和交流能力创造了选择。我使用了灰鼠狐猴(Microcebus murinus)来模拟发声是否可以促进祖先灵长类动物的母系和父系亲属识别。就像今天的老鼠狐猴一样,祖先灵长类动物被认为是小体型的夜间活动生物,它们捕获昆虫并在树枝的细小末端觅食,以取得果实。因此,小鼠狐猴是一个很好的模型物种,因为它的生态位很可能与55-9000万年前的祖传灵长类动物相似。我在马达加斯加的Ankarafantsika国家公园进行了播放实验,测试了小鼠狐猴的激动性呼叫是否包含母系亲属特征,以及狐猴是否识别出母系亲属。与具有频繁联盟行为的大脑,社交复杂的猴子相比,小鼠狐猴对母系亲属和非亲属的激动性反应没有不同的反应,尽管在呼唤中存在中度特征。我通过在具有已知血统关系的殖民地中进行交配和报警来测试父系签名和父系亲属识别。研究结果首次证明,夜间觅食的哺乳动物会发出带有父系特征的交配电话,并识别出父系亲属。有趣的是,警报呼叫没有签名,也没有促进亲属识别,这表明在某些呼叫类型中,对亲属识别的选择要强于其他类型。由于本论文是对生活在散布的夜行性链霉菌灵长类动物中声系亲属识别的首次研究,因此它极大地提高了我们对声音交流在灵长类动物社会复杂性演变中的作用的认识。

著录项

  • 作者

    Kessler, Sharon E.;

  • 作者单位

    Arizona State University.;

  • 授予单位 Arizona State University.;
  • 学科 Anthropology Physical.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2014
  • 页码 281 p.
  • 总页数 281
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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