Alternative reproductive tactics of unflanged and flanged male orangutans revisited

Author:

Kunz Julia A.12ORCID,Duvot Guilhem J.1ORCID,Ashbury Alison M.134ORCID,Willems Erik P.1ORCID,Spillmann Brigitte15ORCID,Dunkel Lynda P.1,bin Abdullah Misdi6,Schuppli Caroline14ORCID,Vogel Erin R.7ORCID,Utami Atmoko Sri Suci6,van Noordwijk Maria A.18ORCID,van Schaik Carel P.158ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Evolutionary Anthropology University of Zurich Zürich Switzerland

2. Institute des Sciences de l'Evolution Montpellier Université de Montpellier, CNRS, IRD Montpellier France

3. Department of Biology University of Konstanz Konstanz Germany

4. Department for the Ecology of Animal Societies Max Planck Institute of Animal Behavior Konstanz Germany

5. Department of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studies University of Zurich Zurich Switzerland

6. Department of Biology Faculty of Biology and Primates Research Center, Universitas Nasional South Jakarta Indonesia

7. Department of Anthropology Rutgers The State University of New Jersey New Brunswick New Jersey USA

8. Comparative Socioecology Group, Department for the Ecology of Animal Societies Max Planck Institute of Animal Behavior Konstanz Germany

Abstract

AbstractIn many slowly developing mammal species, males reach sexual maturity well before they develop secondary sexual characteristics. Sexually mature male orangutans have exceptionally long periods of developmental arrest. The two male morphs have been associated with behavioral alternative reproductive tactics, but this interpretation is based on cross‐sectional analyses predominantly of Northwest Sumatran populations. Here we present the first longitudinal analyses of behavioral changes of 10 adult males that have been observed in both unflanged and flanged morph. We also analyzed long‐term behavioral data on an additional 143 individually identified males from two study sites, Suaq (Sumatra, Pongo abelii) and Tuanan (Borneo, Pongo pygmaeus wurmbii), to assess male mating tactics cross‐sectionally in relation to population, male morph (unflanged and flanged), and other socio‐ecological factors. Both our longitudinal and cross‐sectional results confirm and refine previous cross‐sectional accounts of the differences in mating tactics between the unflanged and the flanged male morphs. In the unflanged morph, males exhibit higher sociability, particularly with females, and higher rates of both copulation and sexual coercion than in the flanged morph. Based on our results and those of previous studies showing that females prefer flanged males, and that flanged males have higher reproductive success, we conclude that unflanged males face a trade‐off between avoiding male‐male contest competition and gaining mating access to females, and thus follow a “best‐of‐a‐bad‐job” mating strategy.

Funder

Universität Zürich

A.H. Schultz-Stiftung zur Förderung Primatologischer Forschung

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

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

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