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Opportunistic mothers: female marmosets ( Callithrix kuhlii) reduce their investment in offspring when they have to, and when they can

All female primates incur energetic costs associated with producing and caring for offspring, but females belonging to the New World primate family Callitrichidae, the marmosets and tamarins, appear to face even further demands. In fact, the energetic demands of rearing callitrichid infants are thou...

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Published in:Journal of human evolution 2005-07, Vol.49 (1), p.122-142
Main Authors: Fite, Jeffrey E., Patera, Kimberly J., French, Jeffrey A., Rukstalis, Michael, Hopkins, Elizabeth C., Ross, Corinna N.
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container_start_page 122
container_title Journal of human evolution
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creator Fite, Jeffrey E.
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description All female primates incur energetic costs associated with producing and caring for offspring, but females belonging to the New World primate family Callitrichidae, the marmosets and tamarins, appear to face even further demands. In fact, the energetic demands of rearing callitrichid infants are thought to have led to the evolution of cooperative infant care in these species. If this explanation is true, then one might expect that natural selection should also have shaped patterns of maternal behavior to be sensitive to the costs of reproduction and equipped females to reduce their investment in offspring under certain conditions. Therefore, we examined the maternal effort and postpartum endocrine profiles of individual female marmosets ( Callithrix kuhlii) across conditions that represented two hallmarks of callitrichid reproduction—conception during the early postpartum period and alloparental assistance. When females conceived during the early postpartum period and faced the upcoming demands of caring for their newly conceived litters (Study 1), they significantly reduced their caregiving effort and had significantly higher postpartum levels of estradiol relative to breeding attempts in which conception occurred later in the postpartum period. Postpartum estradiol was negatively correlated with maternal carrying effort. When experienced alloparents were present (Study 2), females again reduced their caregiving effort relative to breeding attempts in which experienced alloparents were not present. Postpartum cortisol, however, did not vary as a function of experienced alloparental assistance. The results of these studies suggest that female marmosets have been subjected to similar selection pressures as females of other primate taxa—to maximize their reproductive success by reducing their investment in offspring under the worst and best of conditions—and suggest that hormones may mediate within-female variation in maternal care. These studies also provide support for the notion that mothers are “flexible opportunists” when it comes to providing care to their young.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.jhevol.2005.04.003
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subjects Alloparental care
Animals
Callithrix - physiology
Callithrix - psychology
Callitrichidae
Environmental studies
Fauna
Female
Lactation
Lactation - physiology
Maternal Behavior - physiology
Maternal care
Methodology and general studies
Mothers
Postpartum conception
Postpartum Period
Prehistory and protohistory
Reproduction - physiology
Wied's black tufted-ear marmoset
title Opportunistic mothers: female marmosets ( Callithrix kuhlii) reduce their investment in offspring when they have to, and when they can
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