4.6 Article

Alloparenting is associated with reduced maternal lactation effort and faster weaning in wild chimpanzees

期刊

ROYAL SOCIETY OPEN SCIENCE
卷 3, 期 11, 页码 -

出版社

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsos.160577

关键词

alloparenting; allocare; lactation; stable isotopes; weaning; nursing

资金

  1. L.S.B. Leakey Foundation
  2. Explorers Club
  3. Canadian Association for Physical Anthropology
  4. International Primatological Society
  5. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council
  6. Ontario Graduate Scholarship
  7. University of Toronto (School of Graduate Studies and Anthropology Department)

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Alloparenting, when individuals other than the mother assist with infant care, can vary between and within populations and has potential fitness costs and benefits for individuals involved. We investigated the effects of alloparenting on the speed with which infants were weaned, a potential component of maternal fitness because of how it can affect inter-birth intervals, in wild chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes schweinfurthii) at Ngogo, Uganda. We also provide, to our knowledge, the first description of alloparenting in this population and present a novel measure of the contribution of milk to infant diets through faecal stable nitrogen isotopes (delta N-15). Using 42 mother-infant pairs, we tested associations of two alloparenting dimensions, natal attraction (interest in infants) and infant handling (holding, carrying), to the proportion of time mothers spent feeding and to maternal lactation effort (mean nursing rates and mother-infant delta N-15 differences). Neither natal attraction nor infant handling was significantly associated with feeding time. Infant handling was inversely associated with both measures of lactation effort, although natal attraction showed no association. Alloparenting may benefit mothers by enabling females to invest in their next offspring sooner through accelerated weaning. Our findings emphasize the significance of alloparenting as a flexible component of female reproductive strategies in some species.

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