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Female Reproductive Strategies and the Ovarian Cycle in Hamadryas Baboons

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<p>This thesis examines the relationship between sexual behaviour and the ovarian cycle in a group-living primate, Papio h. hamadryas. Of particular interest is whether females modify their ovarian cycle in a manner that is expected increase their reproductive success. The study was conducted on a captive colony where the resident males (RM) had been vasectomised prior to start of the study resulting in all mature females undergoing repeated ovarian cycling throughout the study period. This made the  analysis of sexual behaviour relative to fine scale changes in the ovarian cycle possible. One year of ovarian cycle data and 280 hours of behavioural data was collected via observational sampling during the study. RM vasectomisation did not alter the archetypal one male unit social structure nor the typical socio-spatial organisation of wild hamadryas populations. Females were found to be more promiscuous than in wild populations, however, presumably because of the confounding effect that the high number of simultaneously cycling females had on RM herding (Chapter 1). RMs  dominated copulations over the optimal conceptive period of the ovarian cycle, while the majority of extra-OMU copulations occurred outside this period and were rarely solicited by females. This pattern supports a dual paternity concentration/paternity confusion strategy, and not female choice or fertility insurance strategies (Chapter 2). Females were not found to synchronise or asynchronise their cycles over the 1 year study period,  although a review of the literature on hamadryas breeding patterns suggests that they may be able to do so over shorter periods (Chapter 3). Females did, however, appear to regulate the length of the turgescent phase of their ovarian cycle in a manner that would facilitate a paternity confusion strategy and maximise their expected fitness payoff (Chapter 4). Consequently, this study provides empirical evidence that female hamadryas baboons manipulate their ovarian cycle in a manner that is expected to increase their reproductive success.</p>
Victoria University of Wellington Library
Title: Female Reproductive Strategies and the Ovarian Cycle in Hamadryas Baboons
Description:
<p>This thesis examines the relationship between sexual behaviour and the ovarian cycle in a group-living primate, Papio h.
hamadryas.
Of particular interest is whether females modify their ovarian cycle in a manner that is expected increase their reproductive success.
The study was conducted on a captive colony where the resident males (RM) had been vasectomised prior to start of the study resulting in all mature females undergoing repeated ovarian cycling throughout the study period.
This made the  analysis of sexual behaviour relative to fine scale changes in the ovarian cycle possible.
One year of ovarian cycle data and 280 hours of behavioural data was collected via observational sampling during the study.
RM vasectomisation did not alter the archetypal one male unit social structure nor the typical socio-spatial organisation of wild hamadryas populations.
Females were found to be more promiscuous than in wild populations, however, presumably because of the confounding effect that the high number of simultaneously cycling females had on RM herding (Chapter 1).
RMs  dominated copulations over the optimal conceptive period of the ovarian cycle, while the majority of extra-OMU copulations occurred outside this period and were rarely solicited by females.
This pattern supports a dual paternity concentration/paternity confusion strategy, and not female choice or fertility insurance strategies (Chapter 2).
Females were not found to synchronise or asynchronise their cycles over the 1 year study period,  although a review of the literature on hamadryas breeding patterns suggests that they may be able to do so over shorter periods (Chapter 3).
Females did, however, appear to regulate the length of the turgescent phase of their ovarian cycle in a manner that would facilitate a paternity confusion strategy and maximise their expected fitness payoff (Chapter 4).
Consequently, this study provides empirical evidence that female hamadryas baboons manipulate their ovarian cycle in a manner that is expected to increase their reproductive success.
</p>.

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