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Male reproductive skew, paternal relatedness, and female social relationships
Authors:Schülke Oliver  Ostner Julia
Institution:Integrative Primate Socio-Ecology, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany. oliver.schuelke@uni-goettingen.de
Abstract:Female social relationships among primates are thought to be shaped by socio-ecological factors and phylogenetic constraints. We suggest that patterns of paternal relatedness among females influence measures of social tolerance that have been used to classify species into different social relationship categories. As kin support and kin preference have only been measured for matrilineal kin and related individuals exchange less aggression and have a higher conciliatory tendency, the observed low nepotism levels and high tolerance levels may be an artifact of hidden paternal relatedness among the nonkin category. Using comparative data on macaques, we investigate this hypothesis using male reproductive skew as a proxy for paternal relatedness. Within the limitations of the study we show that populations classified as being less nepotistic, and more tolerant exhibit higher levels of reproductive skew. This first result and the reasoning behind may motivate future students of social relationships to take paternal relatedness into consideration. Potential implications of this finding if repeated with larger samples include that variation in aspects of macaque social relationships may be explained without considering phylogeny or the strength of between-group contest competition for food.
Keywords:female social relationships  reproductive skew  paternal relatedness  social tolerance  kin selection
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