| Literature DB >> 29507881 |
Hiroki Koda1, Tadahiro Murai1, Augustine Tuuga2, Benoit Goossens2,3,4,5, Senthilvel K S S Nathan2, Danica J Stark3,4, Diana A R Ramirez2,3, John C M Sha6, Ismon Osman7, Rosa Sipangkui2, Satoru Seino8, Ikki Matsuda9,10,11,12.
Abstract
Male proboscis monkeys have uniquely enlarged noses that are prominent adornments, which may have evolved through their sexually competitive harem group social system. Nevertheless, the ecological roles of the signals encoded by enlarged noses remain unclear. We found significant correlations among nose, body, and testis sizes and a clear link between nose size and number of harem females. Therefore, there is evidence supporting both male-male competition and female choice as causal factors in the evolution of enlarged male noses. We also observed that nasal enlargement systematically modifies the resonance properties of male vocalizations, which probably encode male quality. Our results indicate that the audiovisual contributions of enlarged male noses serve as advertisements to females in their mate selection. This is the first primate research to evaluate the evolutionary processes involved in linking morphology, acoustics, and socioecology with unique masculine characteristics.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29507881 PMCID: PMC5833997 DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.aaq0250
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Adv ISSN: 2375-2548 Impact factor: 14.136
Fig. 1Facial and vocal characteristics in a proboscis monkey male.
Examples of (A) a male proboscis monkey face, (B) nasal/facial areas, and (C) sound spectrogram of long calls. For (B), the areas shaded by light green and dark blue are facial and nasal areas, respectively. For (C), two sequential vocalizations were included (sounds are available online), and the arrows represent the positions of the three formant frequencies.
Fig. 2Significant correlations between body mass, facial characteristics, testicular volume, vocalizations, and number of harem females in proboscis monkeys.
Bivariate plots representing the correlations between (A) the cube roots of the body mass and the square roots of the nose-to-face (N/F) ratios and (B) the testis sizes of the 18 wild males. Blue lines and shaded areas represent the linear regressions estimated by the “lm” method in R for the observed samples and their 95% confidence interval ranges, respectively. (C) Plots of the number of females belonging to eight harem groups, with the N/F ratios of the core males in the group (circles). The triangle represents the N/F ratio of one male of an all-male group (see main text for a detailed description). (D) Plots representing the correlations between the cube roots of the body mass and the square roots of the N/F ratios of the six captive males. (E) Box plot of the formant dispersion parameters (Dfs) with the body masses of six captive males. (F) Box plot of F3/F1 parameters with the N/F ratios of seven captive males. Box plots represent the medians (horizontal bold lines), 25th and 75th percentiles (bottom and top of the box), and the 1.5× interquartile ranges (whiskers). All observed data were plotted with jitter effects on the x axis.