4.5 Article

Timing is everything: expanding the cost of sexual attraction hypothesis

Journal

ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR
Volume 88, Issue -, Pages 219-224

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.anbehav.2013.11.029

Keywords

Kibale National Park; mating behaviour; primate reproductive ecology; Procolobus rufomitratus; red colobus monkey; sexual strategy; Uganda

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation
  2. L.S.B Leakey Foundation
  3. Conservation International Primate Action Fund
  4. Primate Conservation, Inc.
  5. American Society of Primatologists
  6. Sophie Danforth Conservation Fund
  7. Idea Wild
  8. Explorers club
  9. Columbus Zoo Conservation Fund
  10. Uganda Wildlife Authority
  11. Uganda National Council for Science and Technology
  12. Makerere University Biological Field Station
  13. Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee of the University of Illinois

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Anthropogenic disturbances present challenges to animals. Behavioural plasticity is one way that animals adjust to degraded habitats. In the present study, we examined how ecological conditions impact reproduction of female red colobus monkeys, Procolobus rufomitratus, in Kibale National Park, Uganda. Wrangham (2002, Behavioural diversity in chimpanzees and bonobos, pp. 204-215) proposed the 'cost of sexual attraction' hypothesis to explain the relationship between ecology and female reproduction. Here for the first time we test and expand on this hypothesis in a folivorous species, the red colobus monkey. We compared four groups of red colobus, two in previously logged areas and two in old-growth areas, to examine differences in female reproductive behaviours and physiologies. We predicted that, because of differences in food availability, females living in logged areas would (1) have a shorter duration of genital tumescence, (2) mate less frequently and (3) constrain mating behaviours more to periods of maximal genital tumescence compared to females in old-growth areas. As predicted, females in logged areas were fully tumescent for a significantly shorter period, copulated significantly less frequently and showed mating behaviours when fully inflated significantly more than females in old-growth areas. This behavioural plasticity contributes to the maintenance of female reproductive function in the face of environmental constraints associated with anthropogenic disturbance that influences food resources. (C) 2013 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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