Data di Pubblicazione:
2009
Abstract:
In biology, economics, and politics, distributive power is the key for understanding asymmetrical relationships and it can be
obtained by force (dominance) or trading (leverage). Whenever males cannot use force, they largely depend on females for
breeding opportunities and the balance of power tilts in favour of females. Thus, males are expected not only to compete
within their sex-class but also to exchange services with the opposite sex. Does this mating market, described for humans
and apes, apply also to prosimians, the most ancestral primate group? To answer the question, we studied a scent-oriented
and gregarious lemur, Propithecus verreauxi (sifaka), showing female dominance, promiscuous mating, and seasonal
breeding. We collected 57 copulations involving 8 males and 4 females in the wild (Berenty Reserve, South Madagascar),
and data (all occurrences) on grooming, aggressions, and marking behaviour. We performed the analyses via exact
Spearman and matrix correlations. Male mating priority rank correlated with the frequency of male countermarking over
female scents but not with the proportion of fights won by males over females. Thus, males competed in an olfactory
tournament more than in an arena of aggressive encounters. The copulation frequency correlated neither with the
proportion of fights won by males nor with the frequency of male countermarking on female scents. Male-to-female
grooming correlated with female-to-male grooming only during premating. Instead, in the mating period male-to-female
grooming correlated with the copulation frequency. In short, the biological market underwent seasonal fluctuations, since
males bargained grooming for sex in the mating days and grooming for itself in the premating period. Top scent-releasers
gained mating priority (they mated first) and top groomers ensured a higher number of renewed copulations (they mated
more). In conclusion, males maximize their reproduction probability by adopting a double tactic and by following market
fluctuations.
Tipologia CRIS:
03A-Articolo su Rivista
Keywords:
Aggression; Animals; Female; Lemur; Male; Mating Preference, Animal; Pheromones; Sexual Behavior, Animal; Strepsirhini; Agricultural and Biological Sciences (all); primates
Elenco autori:
Norscia, Ivan; Antonacci, Daniela; Palagi, Elisabetta
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