| Literature DB >> 32720106 |
Jana Robeyst1, Marie L Manguette2,3, Thomas Breuer1,4, Vidrige H Kandza5,1, Martha M Robbins5.
Abstract
In many social species, after the alpha male has been replaced or the group disintegrates, a female's infant is at risk of infanticide by a male. Female gorillas have developed the rare strategy of secondary dispersal in which they transfer between reproductive groups during the limited time period between weaning an infant and conceiving the next one (voluntary dispersal). By doing so they leave a weaker silverback near the end of his tenure and join a stronger silverback at an earlier stage of his own tenure, thereby mitigating the risk of infanticide if the former dies. If females are pregnant or have unweaned offspring when the only male in the group dies, their offspring are vulnerable to infanticide by the new silverback that they join (via involuntary dispersal). In the few known cases of female gorillas transferring when pregnant (mainly after group disintegration), their offspring were killed. We report here on three adult females that transferred voluntarily while pregnant multiple times between two groups yet their offspring were not killed by the new group's silverback. The gorillas were observed from 1995 to 2015 at the Mbeli Bai research site in northern Republic of the Congo. The females gave birth 5-6 months (gestation period 8.5 months) after their last transfer. To our knowledge, these observations are the first to show that wild female western lowland gorillas can transfer voluntarily while pregnant without incurring infanticide by a new silverback. These observations highlight the behavioural plasticity shown by female gorillas in response to sexual coercion by males.Entities:
Keywords: Female mate choice; Female secondary dispersal; Gorilla gorilla; Infanticide risk; Pregnant female transfer
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32720106 PMCID: PMC7599133 DOI: 10.1007/s10329-020-00844-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Primates ISSN: 0032-8332 Impact factor: 2.163
Summary of the study groups used for this study
| Group name | Years observeda | Visits per yearb | Group compositionc | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SB | AF | BB | SA | Juveniles | Infants | |||
| Gretsky | 2004–2015 | 30 | 1 | 7 | 2 | 2 | 2 | |
| Boris | 2014–2015 | 19 | 1 | |||||
| Zulu | 2000–2015 | 36 | 1 | 4 | 1 | 1 | 4 | 1 |
| Saha | 2013–2015 | 38 | 1 | |||||
SB Silverbacks, AF adult females, BB blackbacks, SA male and female subadults [see Breuer et al. (2009) for a description of the classification]
aFirst and last years of observation of a reproductive group
bAverage number of visits to the clearing as a reproductive group or as a solitary silverback per year of observation
cBefore conception by the transferring females
Fig. 1Details of the dispersal of the two females, Ndebele, Khoisan, who transferred while pregnant. To calculate the maximum error, we assumed that each female conceived on the day she was last observed in the previous group (if she transferred on that day) and gave birth on the day she was first observed with her infant in the new group
Fig. 2Photo of Ndebele with her infant Nemo (left) and Khoisan with her infant Kwasimodo (right) in January 2014
Fig. 3Details of the dispersal of the female, Efi, who transferred multiple times before and after conceiving. Both Gretsky and Boris were likely fathers of Efi’s offspring, Estonia. The dates used to estimate the conception dates and error are given in Table S1, and the dates used to calculate the estimated transfer dates are given in Table S2