4.2 Article Proceedings Paper

Environmental factors influencing the seasonality of estrus in chimpanzees

Journal

PRIMATES
Volume 47, Issue 1, Pages 43-50

Publisher

SPRINGER JAPAN KK
DOI: 10.1007/s10329-005-0143-y

Keywords

chimpanzee; environmental factors; estrus; Pan troglodytes; social grouping

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Although the energetics of the estrous cycle in primates is not well understood, evidence suggests that energy and nutrient acquisition influence ovulation and the timing of conception. Energy for estrus has to compete with energy allocated for cellular maintenance, thermoregulation, movement for food, and predation avoidance. While some chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) populations do not have a seasonal birth period, evidence suggests that there is seasonality in the number of estrous females. Similarly, the onset of postpartum Cycles has been reported to be seasonal. We used 33 months of data from the Tai National Park, Cote d'lvoire, to examine how the number of estrous females in a given month was influenced by the abundance and distribution of food, diet, rainfall and temperature. In a second analysis, we examined if there was a seasonal effect on first estrous swellings in adolescent females and postpartum adult females. Results demonstrated that the number of females in estrous in a given month was positively related to food abundance and percent foraging time spent eating insects, and negatively related to mean rainfall in the two preceding months and the mean high temperature. The tinting of first estrous swellings o postpartum females and prepartum young females was positively related to the food abundance, and negatively related to mean high temperature. These results showed that environmental conditions can seasonally limit the energetically demanding estrus cycle. The presence of estrous females increases gregariousness in chimpanzee communities. and this study identified environmental factors that affect estrus directly and hence social grouping Indirectly.

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