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Primate Behavior

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Title: Primate Behavior


1
Chapter 7
  • Primate Behavior

2
Chapter Outline
  • Primate Field Studies
  • The Evolution of Behavior
  • Sympatric Species
  • Why Be Social?
  • Primate Social Behavior

3
Chapter Outline
  • Reproduction and Reproductive Behaviors
  • Mothers, Fathers, and Infants
  • Issue Primates in Biomedical Research Ethics
    and Concerns

4
Behavior
  • Anything organisms do that involves action in
    response to internal or external stimuli.
  • The response of an individual, group, or species
    to its environment.
  • Such responses may or may not be deliberate and
    they arent necessarily the results of conscious
    decision making.

5
Free-ranging
  • Pertaining to non-captive animals living in their
    natural habitat.
  • Ideally, the behavior of wild study groups would
    be free of human influence.

6
Social Structure
  • The composition, size, and sex ratio of a group
    of animals.
  • Social structures are the results of natural
    selection in specific habitats, and they
    influence individual interactions and social
    relationships.
  • In many species, social structure varies,
    depending on different environmental factors.
  • Thus, in most primate species, social structure
    should be viewed as flexible, not fixed.

7
Observing Primates
  • (a) Rhesus macaques spend much of their time on
    the ground and are easier to observe than (b)
    black-and-white colobus.

8
Behavioral Ecology
  • An approach that focuses on the relationship
    between behaviors, the natural environment, and
    biological traits of the species.
  • Based on the assumption that animals, plants, and
    microorganisms evolved together.
  • Some behaviors are influenced by genes and are
    subject to natural selection the same way
    physical characteristics are.

9
The Evolution of Behavior
  • Individuals with behavioral phenotypes that
    increase reproductive fitness pass on their genes
    at a faster rate than others.
  • Behavior is a product of interactions between
    genetic and environmental factors.
  • Species vary in their limits and potentials for
    learning and for behavioral flexibility.
  • These limits and potentials are set by genetic
    factors favored throughout the evolutionary
    history of every species.

10
Primate Social Structure
  • Social structures are the results of natural
    selection in specific habitats.
  • They guide individual interactions and social
    relationships.
  • Primates are among the most social of animals, so
    social behavior is one of the major topics in
    primate research.

11
Factors That Influence Social Structure Body Size
  • Larger animals are better able to retain heat and
    their overall energy requirements are less than
    for smaller animals.

12
Factors That Influence Social Structure
  • Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR) and Diet
  • Smaller animals generally have a higher BMR than
    larger ones.
  • Consequently, smaller primates require an
    energy-rich diet high in protein, fats, and
    carbohydrates.

13
Metabolism
  • The chemical processes within cells that break
    down nutrients and release energy for the body to
    use.

14
Factors That Influence Social Structure
  • Distribution of Resources
  • Leaves can be abundant and will support large
    groups of animals.
  • Fruits and nuts occur in clumps. These can be
    efficiently exploited by smaller groups of
    animals.
  • Some species that rely on foods distributed in
    small clumps tend to be protective of resources,
    especially if their feeding area is small enough
    to be defended.

15
Distribution of Resources
  • This male mountain gorilla has only to reach out
    to find something to eat.

16
Factors That Influence Social Structure
  • Predation
  • Primates are vulnerable to many types of
    predators, including snakes,birds of prey,
    leopards, wild dogs, lions, and even other
    primates.
  • Where predation pressure is high, large
    communities are advantageous.
  • These may be multimale-multifemale groups or
    congregations of one-male groups.

17
Factors That Influence Social Structure
  • Relationships with Other, Nonpredatory Species
  • Many primate species associate with other primate
    and nonprimate species for various reasons,
    including predator avoidance.

18
Factors That Influence Social Structure
  • Dispersal
  • Members of one sex leave the group in which they
    were born when they become sexually mature.
  • Individuals who leave find mates outside their
    natal group, so dispersal is believed to decrease
    the likelihood of close inbreeding.

19
Factors That Influence Social Structure
  • Life Histories
  • Life history traits are characteristics or
    developmental stages that typify members of a
    species and influence reproductive rates.
  • Examples length of gestation, length of time
    between pregnancies, period of infant dependency
    and age at weaning, age of sexual maturity, and
    life expectancy.

20
Factors That Influence Social Structure
  • Distribution and Types of Sleeping Sites
  • Gorillas are the only nonhuman primates that
    sleep on the ground.
  • Primate sleeping sites can be in trees or on
    cliff faces, and their spacing can be related to
    social structure, predator avoidance, and how
    many sleeping sites are available.

21
Factors That Influence Social Structure
  • Activity Patterns
  • Nocturnal species tend to forage for food alone
    or in groups of two or three and many use
    concealment to avoid predators.

22
Factors That Influence Social Structure
  • Human Activities
  • Virtually all nonhuman primate populations are
    impacted by human hunting and forest clearing.
  • These activities disrupt and isolate groups,
    reduce numbers, reduce resource availability, and
    eventually can cause extinction.

23
Matrilines
  • Groupings of females who are all descendants of
    one female (e.g., a female, her daughters,
    granddaughters, and their offspring).
  • Matrilines also include dependent male offspring.
  • Among macaques, some matrilines are dominant to
    others, so that members of dominant matrilines
    have greater access to resources than do members
    of subordinate ones.

24
Types of Nonhuman Primate Social Groups
  • One male-multifemale.
  • Am adult male, several adult females, and
    offspring.
  • The most common structure, typically formed by a
    male joining a kin group of females.
  • Females usually form the permanent group.
  • Examples guenons, gorillas, some pottos, some
    spider monkeys, patas, some langurs, and some
    colobus.

25
Types of Nonhuman Primate Social Groups
  • Multimale-multifemale
  • Several adult males, several adult females, and
    their young.
  • The presence of several males may lead to a
    dominance hierarchy.
  • Examples some lemurs, macaques, mangabeys,
    savanna baboons, vervets, squirrel monkeys, some
    spider monkeys, and chimpanzees.

26
Types of Nonhuman Primate Social Groups
  • Monogamous pair
  • The least common breeding structure among
    nonhuman primates.
  • Extra-pair matings arent uncommon.
  • Species that form pairs are usually arboreal,
    show minimal sexual dimorphism, and are
    frequently territorial.
  • Examples siamangs, gibbons, indris, titis,
    sakis, owl monkeys, and pottos.

27
Types of Nonhuman Primate Social Groups
  • Polyandry
  • One female and two males.
  • This social group is seen only in some New World
    monkeys (marmosets and tamarins).
  • Males participate in care of infants.

28
Types of Nonhuman Primate Social Groups
  • Solitary
  • Individual forages for food alone.
  • This group is seen in some nocturnal prosimians
    (aye-ayes, lorises, and galagos).
  • In some species, adult females may forage in
    pairs or may be accompanied by offspring.
  • Also seen in orangutans.

29
Philopatric
  • Remaining in ones natal group or home range as
    an adult.
  • In most species, members of one sex disperse from
    their natal group as young adults, and members of
    the philopatric sex remain.
  • In most of the nonhuman primate species, the
    philopatric sex is female.

30
Life History Traits
  • Characteristics and developmental stages that
    influence rates of reproduction.
  • Examples include longevity age at sexual
    maturity length of time between births, etc.

31
Strategies
  • Behaviors or behavioral complexes that have been
    favored by natural selection to increase
    individual reproductive fitness.

32
Sympatric
  • Living in the same area.
  • Pertaining to two or more species whose habitats
    partly or largely overlap.

33
Primate Social Strategies
34
Home Range
  • The total area exploited by an animal or social
    group.
  • Usually given for 1 yearor for the entire
    lifetimeof an animal.

35
Predators
  • When a baboon strays too far from its troop, its
    more likely to fall prey to predators.
  • Leopards are the most serious nonhuman threat to
    terrestrial primates.

36
Primate Social Behavior Dominance
  • Many primate societies are organized into
    dominance hierarchies.
  • These impose order by establishing parameters of
    individual behavior.
  • Higher-ranking animals have greater access to
    preferred food and mating partners than lower
    ranking individuals.
  • Dominance hierarchies are sometimes called
    pecking orders.

37
Breeding and Suppressed Males
  • Fully mature, breeding male orangutan with
    well-developed cheek pads (a) compared to a
    suppressed adult male without cheek pads (b).

38
Factors that Influence Dominance Status
  • Sex
  • Age
  • Aggression
  • Time in the group
  • Intelligence
  • Motivation
  • Mothers social position

39
Dominance
  • One young male savanna baboon mounts another as
    an expression of dominance.

40
Primate Social Behavior Communication
  • Raised body hair is an example of an autonomic
    response.
  • Vocalizations and branch shaking are examples of
    deliberate communication.
  • Reassurance is communicated through hugging or
    holding hands.
  • The fear grin, seen in all primates, indicates
    fear and submission.
  • Displays communicate emotional states.

41
Threatening Behavior
  • An adolescent male savanna baboon threatens with
    a characteristic yawn that shows the canine
    teeth.
  • Note that the eyes are closed briefly to expose
    light, cream colored eyelids.
  • This has been termed the eyelid flash.

42
Question
  • Dominance hierarchies
  • guarantee that dominant males are more
    reproductively successful.
  • result in dominant individuals having priority
    access to food.
  • don't guarantee a reproductive advantage in
    dominant males.
  • are permanent.

43
Answer b
  • Dominance hierarchies result in dominant
    individuals having priority access to food.

44
Primate Social Behavior Aggression
  • Conflict within a group frequently develops out
    of competition for resources, including mating
    partners and food items.
  • Most intragroup aggression occurs in the form of
    various signals and displays within the context
    of a dominance hierarchy.
  • Most tense situations are resolved through
    various submissive and appeasement behaviors.

45
Primate Social Behavior Aggression
  • Primate groups are associated with a home range
    where they remain permanently.
  • Within the home range is a portion called the
    core area, which contains the highest
    concentration of predictable resources, and its
    where the group is most frequently found.
  • The core area can also be said to be a groups
    territory, and its the portion of the home range
    defended against intrusion.

46
Displays
  • Sequences of repetitious behaviors that serve to
    communicate emotional states.
  • Nonhuman primate displays are most frequently
    associated with reproductive or agonistic
    behavior.

47
Chimpanzee Facial Expressions
48
Ritualized Behaviors
  • Behaviors removed from their original context and
    sometimes exaggerated to convey information.

49
Primate Social Behavior Affiliative Behaviors
  • Common affiliative behaviors include
    reconciliation, consolation, and simple amicable
    interactions between friends and relatives.
  • Hugging, kissing and grooming are all forms used
    in reconciliation.
  • Relationships are crucial to nonhuman primates
    and the bonds between individuals can last a
    lifetime.
  • Altruism, behaviors that benefit another while
    posing risk to oneself, are common in primate
    species.

50
Grooming Primates
  • (a) Patas monkeys female grooming male. (b)
    Longtail macaques. (c) Savanna baboons. (d)
    Chimpanzees

51
Grooming
  • Picking through fur to remove dirt, parasites,
    and other materials that may be present.
  • Social grooming is common among primates and
    reinforces social relationships.

52
Question
  • Affiliative behaviors
  • arise when there is competition for resources.
  • enhance group cohesiveness.
  • are rare among primates.
  • may include displays.

53
Answer b
  • Affiliative behaviors enhance group cohesiveness.

54
Patterns of Reproduction
  • In most primate societies, sexual behavior is
    tied to the females reproductive cycle.
  • Permanent bonding is not common among nonhuman
    primates.
  • Male and female Bonobos may mate even when the
    female is not in estrus, a behavior that is not
    typical of chimpanzees.

55
Estrous Swelling in a Female Chimpanzee
56
Reproductive Strategies
  • Behavioral patterns that contribute to individual
    reproductive success.
  • Primates produce only a few young in whom they
    invest a tremendous amount of parental care. (k
    selected)
  • Male competition for mates and mate choice in
    females are both examples of sexual selection.

57
K-selected
  • An adaptive strategy whereby individuals produce
    relatively few offspring, in whom they invest
    increased parental care.
  • R-selected - An adaptive strategy that emphasizes
    large numbers of offspring and reduced parental
    care.
  • K-selection and r-selection are relative (e.g.,
    mice are r-selected compared to primates but
    K-selected compared to many fish species).

58
Sexual Selection
  • A type of natural selection that operates on one
    sex, usually males.
  • Long-term, this increases the frequency of traits
    that lead to greater success in acquiring mates.
  • Sexual selection in primates is most common in
    species in which mating is polygynous and male
    competition for females is prominent.
  • Sexual selection produces dimorphism with regard
    to a number of traits, most noticeably body size.

59
Infanticide As A Reproductive Strategy?
  • One way males increase their chances of
    reproducing is by killing infants fathered by
    other males.
  • Individuals maximize their reproductive success,
    no matter the effect on population or species.
  • When an infant dies, its mother resumes cycling
    and becomes sexually receptive.
  • An infanticidal male avoids waiting two to three
    years for the infants to be weaned before he can
    mate with their mothers.

60
Mothers, Fathers and Infants
  • The basic social unit among primates is the
    female and her infants.
  • Except in species in which monogamy or polyandry
    occur, males do help rear offspring.
  • Monkeys raised without a mother were not able to
    form lasting affectional ties.
  • The mother-infant relationship is often
    maintained throughout life.

61
Primate mothers with young.
  • (a) Sykes monkey. (b) Patas monkey.

62
Primate mothers with young.
  • (c) Mongoose lemur. (d) Orangutan. (e) Chimpanzee.

63
Infant Macaque Clinging to Cloth Mother
64
Primate Cultural Behavior
  • Cultural behavior is passed from generation to
    generation through learning.
  • Nonhuman primate infants, through observing their
    mothers and others, learn about food items,
    appropriate behaviors, and how to use and modify
    objects to achieve certain ends.
  • Chimpanzee culture includes tools such as termite
    fishing sticks and leaf sponges.
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