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Stress and the suppression of subordinate reproduction in cooperatively breeding meerkats

机译:协同繁殖的猫鼬的压力和从属繁殖的抑制

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摘要

In many animal societies, dominant individuals monopolize reproduction, but the tactics they employ to achieve this are poorly understood. One possibility is that aggressive dominants render their subordinates infertile by inducing chronic physiological “stress.” However, this hypothesis has been discarded largely for cooperatively breeding species, where reproductive monopolies are often extreme. Here we provide strong support for the stress-related suppression hypothesis in a cooperative mammal, the meerkat (Suricata suricatta). When pregnant, dominant females subject some subordinate females to escalating aggression, culminating in temporary evictions from the group. While evicted, subordinate females suffer chronic elevation of their glucocorticoid adrenal hormone levels, reproductive down-regulation (reduced pituitary sensitivity to gonadotropin-releasing hormone), reduced conception rates, and increased abortion rates. Rather than constantly harassing all subordinate females, dominants only become aggressive when pregnant themselves (when subordinate reproduction would otherwise conflict with their own) and target those females with whom reproductive conflict is most likely (older, pregnant, and more distantly related females). Our findings suggest that dominant female meerkats employ stressful evictions to suppress reproduction among their probable competitors, when attempting to breed themselves. Given the lack of evidence for stress-related suppression in other cooperative breeders to date, it is clear that social stress alone cannot account for the reproductive failure of subordinates across such societies. However, our findings raise the possibility that, in some cooperative breeders at least, dominants may employ stress-related suppression as a backup mechanism to guard against lapses in reproductive restraint by their subordinates.
机译:在许多动物社会中,优势个人垄断了繁殖,但是他们为达到这一目的所采用的策略却鲜为人知。一种可能是,积极进取的统治者通过诱发慢性生理“压力”而使其下属不育。但是,这一假设已被合作繁殖的物种大为遗弃,而繁殖垄断通常是极端的。在这里,我们为合作性哺乳动物猫鼬(Suricata suricatta)中与压力相关的抑制假设提供了有力的支持。怀孕时,优势女性会使某些从属女性遭受不断升级的侵略,最终导致群体中的临时驱逐。下级女性被驱逐时,其糖皮质激素肾上腺激素水平会长期升高,生殖下调(对促性腺激素释放激素的垂体敏感性降低),受孕率降低,流产率增加。统治者不是在不断骚扰所有下属女性,而是只有在怀孕时才会变得具有侵略性(否则下属生殖会与其自身发生冲突),并以最有可能发生生殖冲突的那些女性(年长,怀孕和与亲缘关系更远的女性)为目标。我们的发现表明,优势雌性猫鼬在尝试繁殖自己时,会采用压力驱逐来抑制其可能的竞争对手中的繁殖。鉴于迄今尚无其他合作育种者对压力相关抑制的证据,很明显,仅社会压力无法解释此类社会下属的生殖衰竭。但是,我们的发现提出了这样一种可能性,即至少在某些合作育种者中,优势种群可能会采用与压力相关的抑制作用作为备用机制,以防止下属对其繁殖的抑制作用减弱。

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