Female sifaka mate selectively with one or more resident andlor non-resident males during the breeding season. Various adaptive explanations have been advanced to explain why female primates mate with multiple males including that 1) females seekko confuse paternity and thereby forestall male infant
Reproduction in free-ranging malePropithecus verreauxi: The hormonal correlates of mating and aggression
โ Scribed by Brockman, Diane K.; Whitten, Patricia L.; Richard, Alison F.; Schneider, Adam
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 164 KB
- Volume
- 105
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0002-9483
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โฆ Synopsis
Endocrine studies of captive strepsirrhine primates suggest that physical environment and social factors mediate inter-individual variations in testicular function and serum testosterone (sT) in males. While these studies have made major contributions to our understanding of the individual proximate mechanisms influencing androgen activity in male strepsirrhines, none have investigated how these mechanisms work coincidentally in freeranging populations. In this study we used fecal steroid analysis to examine androgen-behavior interactions associated with reproduction in free-ranging male Propithecus verreauxi. Behavioral and hormone data were collected from two social groups during the 1990-91 and 1991-92 breeding seasons at Beza Mahafaly, Madagascar. Solid phase and radioimmunoassay techniques were used to quantify testosterone (T) in 105 desiccated fecal samples collected weekly from seven males. Results suggest that 1) solid phase extraction and radioimmunoassay techniques were reliable and accurate methods for quantifying T in sifaka feces; 2) fecal T (fT) elevations spanned a minimum of 4 months, peak levels occurring 1 month prior to the January onset of the breeding season; 3) fecal T concentrations were influenced by developmental factors and, among mature males, social factors associated with rank, intergroup aggression, and group instability.
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