Author:
Lu Amy,Feder Jacob A.,Snyder-Mackler Noah,Bergman Thore J.,Beehner Jacinta C.
Abstract
AbstractIn humans, a controversial hypothesis suggests that father absence promotes early puberty in daughters. Data from rodents confirm females accelerate maturation with exposure to novel males (“Vandenbergh effect”) and delay it with exposure to male relatives. Here, we report the first case of male-mediated maturation in a wild primate, geladas (Theropithecus gelada). Females were more likely to mature after a change in the reproductive male: some matured earlier than expected (Vandenbergh effect) and some later (due to father presence). Novel males stimulated a surge in estrogens for all immature females - even females too young to mature. Although male-mediated puberty accelerated first births, the effect was modest, suggesting that alternative scenarios, such as co-evolution with the Bruce effect (male-mediated fetal loss) may explain this phenomenon.One Sentence SummaryNovel males induce an estrogen surge, male-mediated puberty, and a head-start on reproduction for immature female geladas.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory