Birth timing generates reproductive trade-offs in a non-seasonal breeding primate

Archive ouverte

Dezeure, Jules | Baniel, Alice | Carter, Alecia, J | Cowlishaw, Guy | Godelle, Bernard | Huchard, Elise

Edité par CCSD ; Royal Society, The -

International audience. The evolutionary benefits of reproductive seasonality are often measured by a single-fitness component, namely offspring survival. Yet different fitness components may be maximized by different birth timings. This may generate fitness trade-offs that could be critical to understanding variation in reproductive timing across individuals, populations and species. Here, we use long-term demographic and behavioural data from wild chacma baboons (Papio ursinus) living in a seasonal environment to test the adaptive significance of seasonal variation in birth frequencies. We identify two distinct optimal birth timings in the annual cycle, located four-month apart, which maximize offspring survival or minimize maternal interbirth intervals (IBIs), by respectively matching the annual food peak with late or early weaning. Observed births are the most frequent between these optima, supporting an adaptive trade-off between current and future reproduction. Furthermore, infants born closer to the optimal timing favouring maternal IBIs (instead of offspring survival) throw more tantrums, a typical manifestation of mother-offspring conflict. Maternal trade-offs over birth timing, which extend into mother-offspring conflict after birth, may commonly occur in long-lived species where development from birth to independence spans multiple seasons. Our findings therefore open new avenues to understanding the evolution of breeding phenology in long-lived animals, including humans.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Evolutionary determinants of non-seasonal breeding in wild chacma baboons

Archive ouverte | Dezeure, Jules | CCSD

International audience. Animal reproductive phenology varies from strongly seasonal to non-seasonal, sometimes among closely related or sympatric species. While the extent of reproductive seasonality is often attrib...

Transition to siblinghood in a wild chacma baboon population

Archive ouverte | Delaunay, Axelle | CCSD

International audience. In monotocous mammals (i.e. where females produce one offspring at a time), most juveniles will experience the birth of a younger sibling in their life. Transition to siblinghood (TTS) has ra...

Immigrant males' knowledge influences baboon troop movements to reduce home range overlap and mating competition

Archive ouverte | Collet, Julien | CCSD

International audience. Mechanistic models suggest that individuals' memories could shape home range patterns and dynamics, and how neighbours share space. In social species, such dynamics of home range overlap may ...

Chargement des enrichissements...