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Title
Intersexual conflict influences female reproductive success in a female-dispersing primate
Author(s)
Manguette, Marie L.;Robbins, Andrew M.;Breuer, Thomas;Stokes, Emma J.;Parnell, Richard J.;Robbins, Martha M.
Published
2019
Publisher
Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology
Published Version DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00265-019-2727-3
Abstract
In group-living mammals, individual efforts to maximize reproductive success result in conflicts and compromises between the sexes. Females utilize counterstrategies to minimize the costs of sexual coercion by males, but few studies have examined the effect of such behaviors on female reproductive success. Secondary dispersal by females is rare among group-living mammals, but in western gorillas, it is believed to be a mate choice strategy to minimize infanticide risk and infant mortality. Previous research suggested that females choose males that are good protectors. However, how much female reproductive success varies depending on male competitive ability and whether female secondary dispersal leads to reproductive costs or benefits has not been examined. We used data on 100 females and 229 infants in 36 breeding groups from a 20-year long-term study of wild western lowland gorillas to investigate whether male tenure duration and female transfer rate had an effect on interbirth interval, female birth rates, and offspring mortality. We found that offspring mortality was higher near the end of males’ tenures, even after excluding potential infanticide when those males died, suggesting that females suffer a reproductive cost by being with males nearing the end of their tenures. Females experience a delay in breeding when they dispersed, having a notable effect on birth rates of surviving offspring per female if females transfer multiple times in their lives. This study exemplifies that female counterstrategies to mitigate the effects of male-male competition and sexual coercion may not be sufficient to overcome the negative consequences of male behavior.
Keywords
Gorilla gorilla;Infanticide;Infant mortality;Tenure length;Dispersal costs
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PUB24869