Journal Article10.1002/(SICI)1098-2345(200002)50:2<109::AID-AJP2>3.0.CO;2-W
When will the stork arrive? Patterns of birth seasonality in neotropical primates
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TL;DR: The findings are consistent with the hypothesis that food availability is the most important ultimate cause of birth seasonality and suggest thatpredation seems to promote birth synchrony in some species and reduce energy stress during peak lactation, wean infants during peak food availability, or store reserves during peak energy availability.
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Abstract: We review and discuss the ultimate and proximate causes of birth seasonality in Neotropical primates and the seasonal patterns shown by each genus within this group. Our review of the literature shows that most New World monkey populations studied so far show some degree of birth seasonality. Photoperiod is the most important proximate cue used by populations living at relatively high latitudes to time their reproductive events, but almost nothing is known about the proximate factors used by those near the equator. The findings are consistent with the hypothesis that food availability is the most important ultimate cause of birth seasonality. Predation seems to promote birth synchrony in some species (e.g., squirrel monkeys). Multiple regression ANCOVA was used to estimate how the degree of birth seasonality is affected by ecological and life history variables. The ANCOVA model shows that three factors affect the degree of birth seasonality: diet, latitude, and body size. Folivores (howlers) are less seasonal than frugivores and insectivores. The degree of seasonality increases with latitude and shows a humped relationship with body size, peaking at 1.66 kg body mass. This last relationship was expected since small bodied species have to pay a cost (in terms of time lost) by being seasonal on a yearly basis, and large species are buffered against fluctuations in food availability due to their large body mass. To understand which of three alternative birth strategies is followed by each species (reduce energy stress during peak lactation, wean infants during peak food availability, or store reserves during peak energy availability), we compared the location of the birth peak in relation to the peak in food-availability for those populations from which data were available. Most species conform to the typical pattern of births concentrated before the peak in food availability, allowing peak lactation (small-sized species) or weaning (capuchins) to take place before the start of the lean season. The pattern of births of the atelines is consistent with the weaning hypothesis. However, since they give birth during the lean season, this pattern is also consistent with an alternative strategy.
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Citations
Long-term field studies of primates
Peter M. Kappeler,David P. Watts +1 more
- 01 Jan 2012
TL;DR: Long-term field studies have been used extensively in the literature to understand the behavioral plasticity and population dynamics of a critically endangered species, such as Cebus capucinus as mentioned in this paper.
Individual and seasonal variation in fecal testosterone and cortisol levels of wild male tufted capuchin monkeys, Cebus apella nigritus.
TL;DR: The sustained high-magnitude increase in steroids during the peak of adult female sexual activity was associated with a relatively low rate of male-male intragroup aggression.
252
Photoperiodism in Humans and Other Primates: Evidence and Implications:
TL;DR: Historical and experimental evidence indicates that human responses to seasonal changes in the natural photoperiod may have been more robust prior to the Industrial Revolution and that subsequently they have been increasingly suppressed by alterations of the physical environment.
240
Mammalian Seasonal Rhythms: Behavior and Neuroendocrine Substrates
TL;DR: In this article, a review of biological timekeeping mechanisms that allow mammals to engage seasonal phenotypic transitions is presented, focusing on the reproductive system and the mechanisms of seasonal changes in aggression, immune function, and cognition.
167
Environmental determinants of birth seasonality in night monkeys (Aotus azarai) of the Argentinean Chaco
TL;DR: Changes in photoperiod and temperature may promote reproductive activity in females that might conceive and begin pregnancy at a time void of high temperatures that could be metabolically challenging, suggesting an environmental control of reproduction.
126
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