Primates_3

Introduction

  • Course: ANHB 1101 Human Biology I - Primates 3: Primate Behavioural Ecology

  • Instructor: Associate Professor Cyril C. Grueter

  • Contact: cyril.grueter@uwa.edu.au

Learning Outcomes

  • Understand how social and ecological environments influence primate social organization.

  • Explain the relationships between primate morphology and behaviors, including social behavior and mating systems.

Evolution of Primate Traits

  • Natural selection promotes behaviors that enhance survival and reproductive success.

  • Key factors include:

    • Moving speed

    • Energetic efficiency

    • Mating strategies

    • Maternal care responsibilities

Behavioural Ecology

  • Behavioural Ecology studies behavior from an evolutionary and ecological perspective.

    • Behavior results from natural selection leading to adaptations to specific habitats.

    • Anatomical traits affect behavior, e.g., male-male competition relates to sexual dimorphism.

Socioecology

  • Socioecology explains social system variations in relation to ecological and biological factors.

    • Resource availability influences:

      • Competition

      • Group dynamics

      • Social interactions

      • Mating patterns

    • Social behaviors are adaptations to environmental contexts.

Social Systems

  • Components of social systems include:

    • Social organization: Group composition and cohesion

    • Social structure: Interactions and relationships within groups

    • Mating system: Patterns of mating and genetic consequences.

Survival and Fitness

  • Key survival strategies include:

    • Finding food

    • Coordination with mates

    • Raising offspring

    • Avoiding diseases and predators

Costs and Benefits of Group Living

  • Costs:

    • Increased competition for resources

    • Higher disease transmission

    • Greater risk of predation

  • Benefits:

    • Defense against competitors

    • Reduced predation risk through group vigilance.

Benefits of Sociality: Lower Risk of Predation

  • Detection: More individuals spotting predators.

  • Deterrence: Group mobbing or chasing off predators.

  • Dilution effect: Higher group size reduces individual predation likelihood.

Optimal Group Size

  • Group size reflects a balance of sociality costs and benefits, influenced by ecological and social conditions.

Gender Competition

  • Females: Compete for food resources.

  • Males: Compete for access to females.

Reproductive Success Limitations

  • Females: Limited by resource access for offspring.

  • Males: Limited by access to females.

  • Ecological pressures shape female distribution, affecting male strategies.

Food Requirements

  • Essential for survival, growth, and reproduction.

  • Dietary specializations lead to anatomical adaptations (e.g., body size, dental characteristics).

  • Food distribution varies across habitats, affecting primate adaptations.

Diet Correlation with Body Size

  • Insectivores are typically smaller than frugivores; frugivores are smaller than folivores.

  • Size differences correlate with energy requirements implications.

Digestion Adaptations

  • Primates lack cellulose digestion; reliance on microorganisms (e.g., Colobines have specialized stomachs for this).

    • Colobines: Multi-chambered stomachs for folivory.

    • Cercopithecines: One-chambered stomachs for frugivory.

Diet and Brain Size

  • Ecological Intelligence Hypothesis: Frugivorous primates have larger brains to remember food sources and locations (Barton 1996).

Resource Distribution Patterns

  • Resource types vary in distribution:

    • Clumped: High-quality foods like fruits.

    • Evenly dispersed: Low-quality foods like leaves.

    • Different distributions affect social structure.

Resource Defensibility

  • Clumped resources are often territorial; evenly distributed resources can be contested.

Competition Types

  • Scramble competition: First-come, first-served for evenly distributed food.

  • Contest competition: Direct competition over defensible food sources.

Feeding Competition in Mountain Gorillas

  • Higher feeding aggression observed around fruit than herbaceous food due to resource competition.

Fission-Fusion Dynamics

  • Group size and structure adapt based on food availability, resulting in flexible group sizes.

Socioecology Principles

  • Distribution of resources impacts competitive dynamics among females, including mating trends and social hierarchies.

Dispersal Patterns

  • Primates exhibit varied dispersal patterns based on species:

    • Male dispersal is prevalent in many; female or bisexual dispersal in others.

Reasons for Animal Dispersal

  • To avoid inbreeding (natal dispersal).

  • Seek better resources or avoid competition.

Primate Social Organization

  • Categories of mating systems:

    • Solitary, monogamous, polyandrous, and polygynous.

    • Examines diversity in group formations and reproductive strategies.

Monogamous Relationships

  • Males may pair permanently with females if they are dispersed (e.g., Titi monkeys, Gibbons).

Polyandry

  • Involves multiple males with one female (seen in Callitrichids).

Polygyny: One-Male Systems

  • One male can monopolize a group of females when they are clumped (e.g., Gorillas, Colobus monkeys).

Male Infanticide

  • A significant cause of infant mortality, especially after changes in male dominance.

Polygyny: Multimale Systems

  • Found in species like chimpanzees and macaques, where multiple males mate with a group of females.

Human Mating Systems

  • Majority of human societies operate under monogamous unions, though polygyny is permitted based on subsistence.

Anatomical Evidence of Sexual Dimorphism

  • Correlation exists between sexual dimorphism patterns and mating systems across mammals.

Sexual Dimorphism and Humans

  • Humans display slight sexual dimorphism, but lesser than ancestral species.

Testis Size and Mating Systems

  • Promiscuous species exhibit larger testes compared to monogamous or polygynous species; humans display mild promiscuity.

Conclusion

  • Understanding primate behavior and social systems illuminates evolutionary adaptations and ecological interactions.

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