Offspring of primiparous mothers do not experience greater mortality or poorer growth: Revisiting the conventional wisdom with archival records of Rhesus Macaques.
Abstract
Female mammals often begin to reproduce before achieving somatic maturity and therefore
face tradeoffs between allocating energy to reproduction or their own continued development.
Constraints on primiparous females are associated with greater reproductive failure,
and first-born infants often have slower growth and greater mortality and morbidity
than infants born to multiparous females. Effects of early life investment may persist
even after weaning when juveniles are no longer dependent on maternal care and mother's
milk. We investigated the long-term consequences of birth order in a large sample
of rhesus macaques, Macaca mulatta, assigned to the outdoor breeding colony at the
California National Primate Research Center (n = 2,724). A joint model for growth
and mortality over the first three years of life allowed us to explicitly connect
growth rates to survival. As expected, males are born heavier and grow faster relative
to females. However, contrary to expectations, later-born males face substantially
lower survival probability during their first three years, whereas first-born males
survive at greater rates similar to both first-born and later-born females. Primiparous
mothers are less likely to conceive during the subsequent breeding season, suggesting
that their reproductive costs are greater than those of multiparous mothers. We speculate
that compensatory tactics, both behavioral and physiological, of first-born offspring
and their mothers, as well as the novel ecology of the captive environment, underlie
these findings. The results presented here provide new insights into how maternal
and infant life history tradeoffs may influence developmental trajectories even after
the period of maternal dependence. Am. J. Primatol. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Type
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/13596Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1002/ajp.22426Publication Info
Nuñez, Chase L; Grote, Mark N; Wechsler, Michelle; Allen-Blevins, Cary R; & Hinde,
Katie (2015). Offspring of primiparous mothers do not experience greater mortality or poorer growth:
Revisiting the conventional wisdom with archival records of Rhesus Macaques. Am J Primatol. 10.1002/ajp.22426. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/13596.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Chase Nunez
Teaching Assistant
National Science Foundation Graduate Research FellowNeil Williams President's Fellow

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