| Literature DB >> 20383331 |
Lucy A Bates1, Rosie Handford, Phyllis C Lee, Norah Njiraini, Joyce H Poole, Katito Sayialel, Soila Sayialel, Cynthia J Moss, Richard W Byrne.
Abstract
Female African elephants signal oestrus via chemicals in their urine, but they also exhibit characteristic changes to their posture, gait and behaviour when sexually receptive. Free-ranging females visually signal receptivity by holding their heads and tails high, walking with an exaggerated gait, and displaying increased tactile behaviour towards males. Parous females occasionally exhibit these visual signals at times when they are thought not to be cycling and without attracting interest from musth males. Using demographic and behavioural records spanning a continuous 28-year period, we investigated the occurrence of this "simulated" oestrus behaviour. We show that parous females in the Amboseli elephant population do simulate receptive oestrus behaviours, and this false oestrus occurs disproportionately in the presence of naïve female kin who are observed coming into oestrus for the first time. We compare several alternative hypotheses for the occurrence of this simulation: 1) false oestrus has no functional purpose (e.g., it merely results from abnormal hormonal changes); 2) false oestrus increases the reproductive success of the simulating female, by inducing sexual receptivity; and 3) false oestrus increases the inclusive fitness of the simulating female, either by increasing the access of related females to suitable males, or by encouraging appropriate oestrus behaviours from female relatives who are not responding correctly to males. Although the observed data do not fully conform to the predictions of any of these hypotheses, we rule out the first two, and tentatively suggest that parous females most likely exhibit false oestrus behaviours in order to demonstrate to naïve relatives at whom to direct their behaviour.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20383331 PMCID: PMC2850927 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0010052
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Occurrence of oestrus events coincident with kin.
| Real oestrus | False oestrus | |
| Coincident with: | ||
| No other elephant | 893 (883.9) | 8 (17.1) |
| Parous female | 76 (75.5) | 1 (1.5) |
| Nulliparous female | 11 (20.6) | 10 (0.4) |
Chi square expected frequencies are shown in parentheses.
Figure 1Coincident occurrence of real and false oestrus events.
The first panel illustrates the pattern of occurrence of the 980 genuine oestrus events, and the second panel shows the 19 false oestrus events. Each panel shows how many events occurred singly in a family, how many coincided with a genuine oestrus event of another parous female, and how many with a nulliparous female.
Figure 2Number of within-family oestrus events observed by nulliparous females.
The mean (±2 SE) number of within-family oestrus events that nulliparous females could potentially have observed before their own first oestrus event, according to whether that first oestrus event coincided with a false oestrus event of a family member, or if it occurred alone. The number of oestrus events that were potentially observed is a minimum figure, collated from birth records and the oestrus database.