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Living with males : benefits and costs to females of resident males in Colobus vellerosus

Hedlund, Johanna LU (2009)
Abstract
Only in primates is permanent male-female association the most widespread social structure of all. The continuous presence of resident males in the social group can have significant impacts on female fitness, both in forms of costs and benefits. In this study I investigate particular short-term benefits and costs of resident males to females in a population of ursine colobus (Colobus vellerosus). I hypothesise that for females permanent association with males result in certain benefits and certain costs, exceedingthose provided or imposed by other females. The results indicate that female derive greater benefits from males than from females during intergroup encounters ... (More)
Only in primates is permanent male-female association the most widespread social structure of all. The continuous presence of resident males in the social group can have significant impacts on female fitness, both in forms of costs and benefits. In this study I investigate particular short-term benefits and costs of resident males to females in a population of ursine colobus (Colobus vellerosus). I hypothesise that for females permanent association with males result in certain benefits and certain costs, exceedingthose provided or imposed by other females. The results indicate that female derive greater benefits from males than from females during intergroup encounters and in the form of vigilance since males were the main participants in intergroup encounter and were more vigilant than females. I could not confirm any type of behaviour employed by resident males that is costly to females. However, the rarity and subtleness of some costly male behaviours imply that more data is needed before making a conclusion on their absence or occurrence in this population and I purpose that herding behaviour could occur at my study site. Moreover, multi-male groups (MM-groups) showed higher rates of vigilance than single-male groups (SM-groups) and had a tendency to experiencing fewer intergroup encounters than SM-groups. I interpret the former as a result of the demanding social conditions in the MM-groups. The latter indicate that females may benefit from MM-group living through a decrease in intergroup encounters. (Less)
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  • scopus:77953148152
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English
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78c11a76-b68a-4919-868d-8314eca2fccf
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2019-11-01 17:49:43
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@misc{78c11a76-b68a-4919-868d-8314eca2fccf,
  abstract     = {{Only in  primates  is  permanent  male-female  association the  most  widespread social structure  of  all.  The  continuous  presence  of  resident  males  in  the  social  group can  have significant impacts on female fitness, both in forms of costs and benefits. In this study I investigate  particular  short-term  benefits  and  costs  of  resident  males  to  females  in  a population of  ursine  colobus  (Colobus  vellerosus).  I  hypothesise  that  for  females permanent  association with  males  result  in  certain  benefits  and certain  costs,  exceedingthose  provided  or  imposed  by other  females.  The  results  indicate  that  female  derive greater  benefits  from  males  than  from  females  during intergroup encounters  and in  the form  of  vigilance  since  males  were  the  main  participants  in  intergroup encounter  and were more vigilant than females. I could not confirm any type of behaviour employed by resident males that is costly to females. However, the rarity and subtleness of some costly male  behaviours  imply  that  more  data  is  needed  before  making a  conclusion on their absence  or  occurrence  in  this  population and  I  purpose  that  herding behaviour  could occur  at  my  study site.  Moreover,  multi-male  groups  (MM-groups)  showed  higher  rates of  vigilance  than  single-male  groups  (SM-groups)  and had  a  tendency  to  experiencing fewer  intergroup encounters  than  SM-groups.  I  interpret  the  former  as  a  result  of  the demanding social  conditions  in  the  MM-groups.  The  latter  indicate  that  females  may benefit from MM-group living through a decrease in intergroup encounters.}},
  author       = {{Hedlund, Johanna}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  title        = {{Living with males : benefits and costs to females of resident males in Colobus vellerosus}},
  year         = {{2009}},
}