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Comparative tests of reproductive skew in male primates: the roles of demographic factors and incomplete control
Authors:Nobuyuki Kutsukake  Charles L Nunn
Institution:(1) Department of Biological Sciences, Graduate School of Sciences, University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan;(2) Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany;(3) Department of Integrative Biology, University of California, Berkeley, CA, USA;(4) Laboratory for Biolinguistics, RIKEN Brain Science Institute, Tokyo, Japan
Abstract:Reproductive skew models have been proposed as a unifying framework for understanding animal social systems, but few studies have investigated reproductive skew in a broad evolutionary context. We compiled data on the distribution of mating among males for 31 species of primates and calculated skew indices for each study. We analyzed the determinants of mating skew with phylogenetic comparative methods to investigate two models from reproductive skew theory, the concession model and the tug-of-war model. Mating skew decreased as the number of males increased in multimale groups, suggesting that monopolization of females becomes more difficult when there are more rivals, and therefore supporting the tug-of-war model. We predicted that single males are unable to monopolize receptive females as overlap in female receptivity increases (estrous synchrony) and, as a result, that mating skew decreases. However, we did not find any evidence for a link between female estrous synchrony and male mating skew. Finally, the concession model predicts high skew in male philopatric species relative to species in which males disperse, yet our measures of mating skew showed no significant associations with qualitative scores of male dispersal. More definitive tests of the concession model will require more quantitative measures of relatedness, which are presently unavailable for most primate species in our study. Overall, our results provide support for the tug-of-war model in primates, and the approach developed here can be applied to study comparative patterns of skew in other biological systems.Electronic supplementary material Supplementary material is available in the online version of this article at and is accessible to authorized users.
Keywords:Reproductive skew  Primates  Tug-of-war model  Estrous synchrony  Phylogenetic comparative test
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