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    Puberty and dispersal in a wild primate population

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    Date
    2013-07
    Author
    Onyango, Patrick O
    Gesquiere, Laurence R
    Altmann, Jeanne
    Alberts, Susan C
    Type
    Article; en
    Language
    en
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    This article is part of a Special Issue “Puberty and Adolescence”. The onset of reproduction is preceded by a host of organismal adjustments and transformations, involving morphological, physiological, and behavioral changes. In highly social mammals, including humans and most nonhuman primates, the timing and nature of maturational processes are affected by the animal's social milieu as well as its ecology. Here, we review a diverse set of findings on how maturation unfolds in wild baboons in the Amboseli basin of southern Kenya, and we place these findings in the context of other reports of maturational processes in primates and other mammals. First, we describe the series of events and processes that signal maturation in female and male baboons. Sex differences in age at both sexual maturity and first reproduction documented for this species are consistent with expectations of life history theory; males mature later than females and exhibit an adolescent growth spurt that is absent or minimal in females. Second, we summarize what we know about sources of variance in the timing of maturational processes including natal dispersal. In Amboseli, individuals in a food-enhanced group mature earlier than their wild-feeding counterparts, and offspring of high-ranking females mature earlier than offspring of low-ranking females. We also report on how genetic admixture, which occurs in Amboseli between two closely related baboon taxa, affects individual maturation schedules.
    URI
    http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0018506X13000494
    http://hdl.handle.net/11295/89119
    Citation
    Hormones and Behavior Volume 64, Issue 2, July 2013, Pages 240–249 Puberty and Adolescence
    Publisher
    University of Nairobi
    Subject
    Puberty; Maturation; Baboons; Growth; Reproductive hormones; Sex differences; Ecological differences; Socio-demographic differences; Genetic differences
    Collections
    • Faculty of Agriculture & Veterinary Medicine (FAg / FVM) [5481]

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