HAYATI Journal of Biosciences
Vol. 27 No. 3 (2020): July 2020

Identification of Follower Status Based on Male Proximity Score in Crested Macaque

Andre Pasetha (Department of Biology, Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, IPB University, Bogor)
Lisa Michelle Danish (Junior Research Group of Primate Sexual Selection, German Primate Center, Göttingen)
Dyah Perwitasari-Farajallah (Department of Biology, Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, IPB University, Bogor)
Muhammad Agil (Department of Veterinary Clinic, Reproduction, and Pathology, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, IPB University, Bogor)
Antje Engelhardt (School of Natural Sciences and Psychology, Liverpool John Moores University, Liverpool)



Article Info

Publish Date
01 Jul 2020

Abstract

Crested macaque live in multimale-multifemale social groups where temporary association (consortship) typically occurs. Current theory and these limited qualitative observations suggest the hypothesis that behavior functions as a means for males to gain access to fertile females. The aim of this study was to investigate follower status based on quantitative method. Males were classified as either “consort males,” “followers,” and “non-followers” based on proximity maintanance every 15 minute uses scan sampling. Tactics used by followers were classified into 1) individual challenge, 2) coalitionary challenge, 3) abandoned takeover, and 4) opportunistic takeover. The proportion of successful takeovers by followers was calculated by dividing the number of takeovers by followers by the total number of observed takeovers. The proportion of followers is higher than average on D-5 and earlier, D-4, and D-3. Only two of the four consort takeover tactics were used by followers. For abandoned which made up 40% and for individual tactic was made up to 11.5% of consort takeovers tactic used. This study contribute to our understanding of alternative mating strategy in primate and provide the first quantitative data demonstrating that following is an alternative mating strategy in crested macaque (Macaca nigra).

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Journal Info

Abbrev

hayati

Publisher

Subject

Agriculture, Biological Sciences & Forestry Earth & Planetary Sciences

Description

HAYATI Journal of Biosciences (HAYATI J Biosci) publishes articles and short communication in tropical bioscience fields such as development, biotechnology, biodiversity and environmental issues. HAYATI J Biosci covers wide range of all life forms topics including virus, microbes, fungi, plants, ...