| Literature DB >> 31112681 |
Martin Surbeck1, Christophe Boesch2, Catherine Crockford2, Melissa Emery Thompson3, Takeshi Furuichi4, Barbara Fruth5, Gottfried Hohmann2, Shintaro Ishizuka4, Zarin Machanda6, Martin N Muller3, Anne Pusey7, Tetsuya Sakamaki4, Nahoko Tokuyama4, Kara Walker7, Richard Wrangham8, Emily Wroblewski9, Klaus Zuberbühler10, Linda Vigilant2, Kevin Langergraber11.
Abstract
In many group-living mammals, mothers may increase the reproductive success of their daughters even after they are nutritionally independent and fully grown [1]. However, whether such maternal effects exist for adult sons is largely unknown. Here we show that males have higher paternity success when their mother is living in the group at the time of the offspring's conception in bonobos (N = 39 paternities from 4 groups) but not in chimpanzees (N = 263 paternities from 7 groups). These results are consistent with previous research showing a stronger role of mothers (and females more generally) in bonobo than chimpanzee societies.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31112681 PMCID: PMC7335732 DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2019.03.040
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Biol ISSN: 0960-9822 Impact factor: 10.900