首页> 外文期刊>Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology >Reproductive sharing and proximate factors mediating cooperative breeding in the African wild dog (Lycaon pictus)
【24h】

Reproductive sharing and proximate factors mediating cooperative breeding in the African wild dog (Lycaon pictus)

机译:繁殖共享和邻近因素介导非洲野狗(Lycaon pictus)的合作繁殖

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例
           

摘要

Although dominant African wild dogs (Lycaon pictus) are generally believed to be the sole breeders within a pack, earlier behavioral and endocrine data suggest that reproduction could be shared with subordinates. We performed an extensive behavioral, demographic, and genetic evaluation of a wild dog population in South Africa to examine the level of such sharing and the proximate mechanisms influencing reproductive contributions of each sex. While a majority of pups were born to dominants because of a lack of subordinate potential breeders, we discovered a substantial portion of reproductive sharing between dominants and subordinates. Compared with alpha females that mated annually, subordinate beta females bred in 54.5% of years whereas thetas never bred. The three top-ranking males all sired pups (56.0%, 32.0%, and 12.0%, respectively) when three or more adult males were present. With only two pack males, alpha and beta individuals shared reproduction nearly equally (55.2% and 44.8%, respectively), and litters of mixed paternity were discovered on eight of 15 (53.3%) occasions. A skewed adult sex-ratio and frequent alpha mortalities for females and behavioral aggression in males allowed most individuals to attain dominant status in their lifetime, creating a constantly shifting social hierarchy. Genetic parentage results corresponded to reported hormone profiles, suggesting physiological suppression in some lower-ranked individuals of both sexes. Thus, a combination of demographic, behavioral, and hormonal proximate factors mediates reproductive partitioning in wild dogs. We conclude that reproductive sharing can be significant in this species, especially for males that have less robust suppressive mechanisms than females. Keywords Dominance - Lycaon pictus - Multiple parentage - Proximate mechanisms - Reproductive sharing - Subordinate breeding Communicated by A. Schulte-Hostedde
机译:尽管通常认为非洲优势犬(Lycaon pictus)是一头pack内唯一的繁殖者,但早期的行为和内分泌数据表明繁殖可与下属共享。我们对南非的野狗种群进行了广泛的行为,人口统计学和基因评估,以研究这种共享的水平以及影响每种性别生殖贡献的邻近机制。虽然大多数幼崽由于缺乏下属的潜在繁殖者而出生于统治者,但我们发现,统治者和下属之间有相当一部分繁殖。与每年交配的阿尔法雌性相比,下等β雌性在54.5%的年内繁殖,而θ从未繁殖。当三个或更多成年雄性在场时,三只排名最高的雄性都对幼崽产生了警戒(分别为56.0%,32.0%和12.0%)。在只有两群雄性的情况下,阿尔法和贝塔个体的繁殖率几乎相同(分别为55.2%和44.8%),并且在15次中有8次(53.3%)被发现有杂种陪伴。成年男女性别比例的偏差和男性的频繁阿尔法死亡率和男性的行为侵略性使大多数人一生都处于统治地位,从而形成了不断变化的社会等级制度。遗传亲缘关系的结果与报道的激素特征相对应,表明在某些性别较低的个体中生理抑制。因此,人口,行为和激素邻近因素的组合介导了野狗的生殖分裂。我们得出的结论是,在该物种中生殖共享可能很重要,特别是对于抑制机制不如雌性的雄性而言。关键词优势-产卵-多重亲缘关系-近端机制-生殖共有-下属育种A. Schulte-Hostedde交流

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号