Primate Social Behaviour ch 7 Flashcards
Define: Analogy
Similarity of traits resulting from similar use, not due to shared ancestry
Define: Homology/Homologous
Similarity of traits resulting from shared ancestry
Define: Homoplasy
Process that leads to the development of analogies(similar traits resulting from similar use)
Ancestral traits
traits inherited from ancestors
Derived traits
traits that are evolved from the ancestral condition
Phylogeny
Family tree
What are immediate (proximate) causes of Primate social behaviour?
Hormonal, physiological causes -Hunger fear sexual urges, ect.
Also shaped by deeper, evolved tendencies through natural and sexual selection.
Adapoids
ancestral to strepsirhines (lemurs, lorises)
Omomyoids
ancestral to haplorhines (tarsiers, monkeys, apes)
R- selected
Reproductive strategy in which females have many offsrping, birth intervals are short, maternal investment per offspring is low.
K-selected
Reproductive strategy in which few offspring are produced per female, birth intervals are long, maternal investment is high.
Why are humans Bipedal?
Energetic efficiency- efficient walking, ability to dissipate heat
Ecological influences- better view of surroundings
Dietary scenarios- feeding in fruit trees easier
Sexual selection- more impressive looking males to gain access to females
Female philpatry
Primate social system in which females remain and breed in the group of their birth, and males emigrate.
Male philopatry
Primate social system in which males remain and breed in the group of their birth, and females emigrate.
Give and example that illustrates the political nature of life among nonhuman primates?
Dominance
- males compete for females
- males establish a dominance hierarchy
Ex) Chimpanzees:
- all adult males are dominant to all females
- to climb hierarchy, adolescent males first achieve dominance over all adult females, and then progress up until they have reached their potential
Why have primates evolved to group living?
- improves access to mates, food
- affords protection from predators
Types of Nonhuman primate societies : Solitary
- females and offspring occupy individual territories
- males occupy territories that overlap several female territories
Types of nonhuman primate societies: Monogamy
- males and females in long-term pair bond
- a female reproductive strategy, he provides service in return for a high degree of certainty of fatherhood
Types of nonhuman primate societies: One-Male Polygyny
-one males monopolizes as many females as he can
Extragroup males
- males that can’t obtain their own females
- sometimes will attach one-male polygyny groups and try to take over
- sometimes bachelor groups will raid one-male groups, this can lead to multimale groups
Types of nonhuman primate societies: Multimale Polygyny
- many males and many females in group
- males compete for priority of access
- dominance hierarchy
Types of nonhuman primate societies: Fission- fusion polygyny
- most complex nonhuman primate social system
- members join up and split apart unpredictably in temporary foraging parties
- only stable unit if the female and offspring
- evolved due to seasonality availability of fruit
Types of nonhuman primate societies: Polyandry
- one female, many males
- socially polyandrous
- reproductively monogamous