Estimates of life history parameters in a high latitude, arid‐country vervet monkey population

Author:

Henzi S. Peter12ORCID,Blersch Rosemary A.123,Bonnell Tyler R.12ORCID,Clarke Madison12,Dostie Marcus J.12,Lucas Miranda12,Jarrett Jonathan12,McFarland Richard124,Nord Christina125,Takahashi April12,Vilette Chloé12,Young Chris124,Young Mirjam M.124,Barrett Louise12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology University of Lethbridge Lethbridge Canada

2. Applied Behavioural Ecology and Ecosystems Research Unit University of South Africa Pretoria South Africa

3. Department of Population Health and Reproduction University of California Davis California USA

4. Department of Psychology Nottingham Trent University Nottingham UK

5. Department of Psychology University of California Davis California USA

Abstract

AbstractWe present data on life history parameters from a long‐term study of vervet monkeys in the Eastern Cape, South Africa. Estimates are presented of age at first conception for females and age at natal dispersal for males, along with the probability of survival to adulthood for infants born during the study, female reproductive life‐span, reproductive output (including lifetime reproductive success for a subset of females), and inter‐birth interval (IBI) duration. We also assess the effect of maternal age and infant survival on length of IBI. We then go on to compare life history parameters for our population with those from two East African populations in Kenya (Amboseli and Laikipia). We find there is broad consensus across the three populations, although mean infant survival was considerably lower for the two East African sites. Such comparisons must be made cautiously, however, as local ecology across the duration of the studies obviously has an impact on the estimates obtained. With this caveat in place, we consider that the concordance between values is sufficient to enable the values reported here to be used in comparative studies of primate life history, although data from habitats with higher rainfall and lower levels of seasonality are needed, and the results presented here should not be seen as canonical.

Funder

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

National Research Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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