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Why chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes schweinfurthii) mothers are less gregarious than nonmothers and males: the infant safety hypothesis

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Abstract

Socialization of young is an important component of maternal care in social mammals. It is therefore perplexing that female chimpanzees with dependent offspring spend more time alone than females without dependent offspring, and than males. We propose that chimpanzee mothers are less gregarious than nonmothers and males to reduce the risk of injury that aggressive males pose to their offspring. We predict that mothers will associate less with males, associate with fewer males, and reduce mother−infant proximity in the presence of males, and that these effects will reduce with increasing offspring age. We test whether the pattern of gregariousness and mother−offspring proximity support these predictions in the Kanyawara chimpanzee community in Uganda. The probability that a female was found in the presence of males was lower for mothers than nonmothers and increased with offspring age. The probability that a female was found with other females did not differ between mothers and nonmothers. Mother-to-offspring distance was higher when a mother was in an all-female group than in a mixed-sex group and increased with her offspring's age. Mother-to-offspring distance was greatest when there were relatively low numbers of males and relatively high numbers of females in a subgroup. We propose that mothers avoid grouping with males because of the vulnerability of their young, and that the presence of males in a subgroup increases a female's protectiveness of her young. We discuss the implications of our findings and the relevance of fission−fusion group formation to chimpanzee mothers.

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Acknowledgements

E.O. received the following funding for this research: Compton Foundation Fellowship, Franklin Mosher Baldwin Fellowship (L.S.B. Leakey Foundation) financial and logistical support during analysis and write-up from the Harvard University Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, and Conservation International. We thank the Uganda Wildlife Authority and the Uganda National Council for Science and Technology for permission to conduct this study. Assistance with fieldwork was given by C. Muruuli, J. Basigara, P. Tuhairwe, F. Mugurusi, D. Sebugwawo, and the late D. Muhangi. We thank Richard Wrangham, Charles Nunn, and three anonymous referees for comments on the manuscript. We are grateful to Richard Wrangham, Gilbert Isabirye-Basuta, Tim Clutton-Brock, Colin Chapman, David Watts, John Mitani, Andrew Russell, Redouan Bshary, John Kasenene, Vernon Reynolds, Derek Pomeroy, Christine Dranzoa, Panta Kasoma, Kim Duffy, Sonya Kahlenberg, Katharine Pieta, Melissa Emery Thompson, Zarin Machanda, and Eva Laier for comments and advice at various stages of this study.

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Correspondence to Emily Otali.

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Communicated by C. Nunn

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Otali, E., Gilchrist, J.S. Why chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes schweinfurthii) mothers are less gregarious than nonmothers and males: the infant safety hypothesis. Behav Ecol Sociobiol 59, 561–570 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00265-005-0081-0

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