共查询到5条相似文献,搜索用时 0 毫秒
1.
Carlos A. Peres 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》1989,25(3):227-233
Summary The costs and benefits of territorial defense were examined in a group of five wild golden lion tamarins, Leontopithecus rosalia, at Poco d'Antas Biological reserve, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. I examined the effects of both interference and exploitative competition between groups of tamarins by comparing their use of space, time budgets and foraging success in different contexts of intergroup interactions and in quadrats shared and not shared by other groups. Tamarins spent more time moving and vocalizing, and less time feeding, foraging, and resting during intergroup encounters than in non-encounter contexts. Irrespective of intergroup distance, the group spent more time in overlapping areas of the range periphery than expected on the basis of quadrat availability. In those areas, however, foraging success per unit of foraging effort was lower than in exclusive areas of the range center. This suggests that access to high payoff central areas depended on costly defense (by both interference and exploitation) of the range periphery. Time and energy invested by the resident group in territorial defense (1) increased the availability of food in the range center, and (2) minimized food loss to neighboring groups in the range periphery. These benefits are likely to justify the costs of defense for an animal which depends on easily-depletable food supplies, such as prey in microhabitats and small concentrations of fruits and nectar. 相似文献
2.
Summary. Induction of secondary metabolites to herbivore damage is a widespread phenomenon among plants and serves to enhance resistance
by reducing suitability or increasing toxicity of foliage. Post-damage responses of primary metabolites are less well known;
reductions in primary metabolites may increase resistance by decreasing palatability or nutritional suitability for herbivores
or by potentiating toxicity of secondary metabolites. In this study, we examined response to simulated herbivory in Pastinaca sativa, the wild parsnip, in both primary and secondary metabolites. We found that induction of secondary metabolites in response
to damage is largely restricted to a single class of compounds, the furanocoumarins. These prooxidant compounds are known
to be toxic to a wide variety of insect herbivores. The only primary metabolite that responded to damage was total soluble
protein, which increased significantly 24 h after damage. After 24 h, the correlation between total furanocoumarins and total
sugars was significant and negative (r = − 0.697). This correlation likely reflects an independent response of sugar to damage,
rather than a diversion of resources into furanocoumarin production, inasmuch as this correlation at 3 h, after furanocoumarin
induction had taken place, was not significant. In other secondary metabolite pathways, damage produced a significant decline
in farnesene and a C-16 unsaturated fatty acid, 7,10,13-hexadecatrienoic acid, each of which may potentiate the furanocoumarin
defense response. Farnesene may enhance photooxidative activation of the furanocoumarins and 7,10,13-hexadecatrienoic acid
may serve as a precursor to jasmonic acid, a key hormone in regulating induction responses. With few key exceptions, quantities
of both primary and secondary metabolites in wild parsnip foliage are unaffected by damage. Those that are affected may well
play a role in resistance of parsnips to herbivores.
Received 1 July 1998; accepted 28 September 1998. 相似文献
3.
M. J. O’Riain N. C. Bennett P. N. M. Brotherton G. McIlrath T. H. Clutton-Brock 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2000,48(6):471-477
Meerkats live in co-operatively breeding familial groups in which reproduction is monopolised by a dominant pair of breeders.
Offspring of the breeders are behaviourally subordinate, and typically remain in their natal group as sexually mature, non-breeding
helpers. In this study, we investigated the proximate factors limiting subordinate reproduction. Evidence for reproductive
suppression by dominants was investigated by comparing life history, behaviour and hormonal profiles of dominants and subordinates.
Baseline levels of plasma luteinising hormone (LH) were significantly higher in dominant than in subordinate females. However,
following an exogenous injection of gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (GnRH), both categories had comparable concentrations
of circulating LH. There were no significant differences in pre- or post-GnRH challenge LH levels in dominant or subordinate
males. Reproduction in both dominant and subordinate females rarely occurred in the absence of unrelated males. Given that
groups typically comprise parents and offspring, lack of suitable mates emerged as the primary constraint on subordinate reproduction.
When this constraint was removed, subordinates typically bred but at a lower rate than dominants. This difference in reproduction
may be attributed to intrasexual competition manifested through direct interference by dominant females through subordinate
evictions, infanticide and the abandoning of subordinate litters. We argue that differences in reproductive regulation within
mammalian co-operative breeding systems may be explained by differences in the mating strategy (inbreeding versus outbreeding)
and the probability that subordinates in obligate outbreeding species will encounter unrelated opposite-sex partners.
Received: 19 April 2000 / Accepted: 17 July 2000 相似文献
4.
Offspring should be selected to influence maternal effort to maximize their own fitness, whereas mothers are selected to limit
investment in present progeny. In mammals, this leads to a conflict over the amount of milk provided and the timing of weaning.
The intensity and time course of such conflict has so far mostly been investigated experimentally in altricial rodents. However,
it is expected that offspring options for conflict will depend on developmental state. We therefore investigated in the highly
precocial domestic guinea pig (Cavia aperea f. porcellus) who decides over nursing performance and weaning and how pup state influences these decisions. Specifically, we tested whether
a threshold mass of pups predicts weaning time. By exchanging older litters against neonates and vice versa, we produced a
situation in which females differed in lactational stage from the cross-fostered pups. Our results indicate that females decide
about the timing of weaning, as cross-fostered younger pups were weaned at a much younger age than controls and older pups
benefited from continuing lactation of foster mothers. Growth rates did not differ in the treatment groups, and different
weaning ages resulted in differing weaning mass refuting the hypothesis that weaning is based on a threshold mass of offspring.
This constitutes clear evidence that in a precocial rodent, the guinea pig, decisions about maternal care are primarily determined
by maternal state and little influenced by pup state despite the extreme precociality of offspring. We suggest that precocial
pups show little resistance to early weaning when food is abundant, as they reach sufficient nutritional independence by the
middle of lactation to enable independent survival. 相似文献
5.
Karen J. Nutt 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2007,61(11):1651-1663
Current mating system theory predicts that the number of females breeding in a group will depend on the number of females
in the group and the accessibility of unrelated males, whereas the number of males breeding in a group will depend on the
ability of males to control access to reproductive females. By combining information on group composition with genetic data,
I determined whether breeding patterns in a rock-dwelling rodent, Ctenodactylus gundi, were concordant with these expectations. C. gundi breeding patterns varied from facultative monogamy to uni-male polygyny to multi-male polygyny. The number of reproductive
individuals of each sex in a group increased with group size. Whereas communal breeding among related females tended to increase
female reproductive success, males breeding in the same group were unrelated to other group members and seemed to compete
over access to matings. While some males were assigned offspring from neighboring social groups, most group-living males successfully
monopolized the reproduction of females within their group. There was no evidence that females had multiply sired litters,
although some bred with alternative males in separate breeding attempts. Although numerous individuals were not assigned as
parents or offspring, genetic information enabled me to determine that most unassigned individuals were philopatric group
members, whereas only a few were unrelated immigrants into their current social group. Together, these results provide evidence
that C. gundi social groups represent fairly distinct reproductive units whose breeding patterns are dependent on group size and composition
in accordance with theoretical predictions.
Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users. 相似文献