31 results on '"Russell C. Van Horn"'
Search Results
2. La fenología de Colicodendron scabridum, sapote, en un bosque seco del norte del Perú
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José Vallejos, Rolando Montenegro, R. Isaí Sanchez, Russell C. Van Horn, Sonia Palacios-Ramos, D. Javier Vallejos, Robyn D. Appleton, and Megan A. Owen
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Horticulture ,Phenology ,Food availability ,Precipitation ,Biology ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Inverse correlation ,Monthly average ,Colicodendron scabridum ,Transect - Abstract
Colicodendron scabridum, commonly known as “sapote”, is one of the most common woody species in seasonally dry neotropical forests, and an important food for numerous animals. We investigated sapote’s reproductive phenology and evaluated its relationship to temperature and precipitation. To do so, we installed seven 2 m x 300 m transects, each with fifteen focal individual sapote trees, at seven sites from 257 – 353 m at Cerro Venado, Lambayeque, Peru. The duration of flowering and fruiting varied among individuals, sites, and years. On average, 85-97 % of individuals with flowers bore fruit. The average fruiting period was shorter than the average flowering period, which it followed three months later. We used a cross correlation test to evaluate the relationship between flowering, and fruiting, with the monthly average temperature and precipitation. Sapote flowering changed in opposition to monthly average temperature, with a strong inverse correlation between flowering and temperature. In contrast, the frequency of individuals with fruits was positively correlated with temperature. There was no relationship between monthly precipitation with either flowering or fruiting. Our results suggest that temperature may determine when the species reproduces, thus affecting food availability for wildlife. The phenological variations we recorded are relevant to decisions for the conservation of this species.
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- 2022
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3. Multispecies facial detection for individual identification of wildlife: a case study across ursids
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Melanie Clapham, Ed Miller, Mary Nguyen, and Russell C. Van Horn
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Animal Science and Zoology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
To address biodiversity decline in the era of big data, replicable methods of data processing are needed. Automated methods of individual identification (ID) via computer vision are valuable in conservation research and wildlife management. Rapid and systematic methods of image processing and analysis are fundamental to an ever-growing need for effective conservation research and practice. Bears (ursids) are an interesting test system for examining computer vision techniques for wildlife, as they have variable facial morphology, variable presence of individual markings, and are challenging to research and monitor. We leveraged existing imagery of bears living under human care to develop a multispecies bear face detector, a critical part of individual ID pipelines. We compared its performance across species and on a pre-existing wild brown bear Ursus arctos dataset (BearID), to examine the robustness of convolutional neural networks trained on animals under human care. Using the multispecies bear face detector and retrained sub-applications of BearID, we prototyped an end-to-end individual ID pipeline for the declining Andean bear Tremarctos ornatus. Our multispecies face detector had an average precision of 0.91–1.00 across all eight bear species, was transferable to images of wild brown bears (AP = 0.93), and correctly identified individual Andean bears in 86% of test images. These preliminary results indicate that a multispecies-trained network can detect faces of a single species sufficiently to achieve high-performance individual classification, which could speed-up the transferability and application of automated individual ID to a wider range of taxa.
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- 2022
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4. Site characteristics influence Andean bear natal-den selection in dry forest habitat
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D. José Vallejos, James K. Sheppard, Robyn D. Appleton, R. Isaí Sanchez, Megan A. Owen, Russell C. Van Horn, Javier Vallejos, and Ronald R. Swaisgood
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biology ,Ecology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Dry forest ,Context (language use) ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,biology.organism_classification ,Geography ,Habitat ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Reproduction ,Tremarctos ornatus ,Sea level ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,media_common - Abstract
Natal dens are critical for reproduction in bears, yet we know virtually nothing of Andean bear (Tremarctos ornatus) denning ecology, nor whether female Andean bears select dens or den sites with specific characteristics. We analyzed data from 2008 to 2013 on characteristics of 8 natal dens (shelter and surroundings within 5 m) and den sites (context at ≥50 m from den) used by 4–5 females, with 21 potential (suitable but unused) natal dens and 30 potential den sites in the equatorial dry forest of Cerro Venado, Lambayeque, Peru. All observed natal dens were preexisting cavities under rocks, 2 m (242.3 ± 32.97 cm) and minimum vertical height within the resting area was
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- 2021
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5. Reducing Human Impacts on Andean Bears in NW Peru Through Community-based Conservation
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Jenny Anne Glikman, Russell C Van Horn, and Samantha A Young
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Geography ,Agroforestry ,Wildlife management ,Community-based conservation - Published
- 2019
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6. Bear Sensory Systems
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Agnieszka Sergiel and Russell C Van Horn
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- 2019
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7. The Andean bear alopecia syndrome may be caused by social housing
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Jacob A. Shanks, Megan A. Owen, Russell C. Van Horn, Meg Sutherland‐Smith, Gaylene Thomas, and Andrés E. Bracho Sarcos
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0106 biological sciences ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Chronic condition ,Public housing ,Captivity ,Biology ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Animals ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,050102 behavioral science & comparative psychology ,Animal Husbandry ,05 social sciences ,Individual sex ,Alopecia ,General Medicine ,South America ,biology.organism_classification ,Housing, Animal ,South american ,North american population ,North America ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Animals, Zoo ,Female ,Tremarctos ornatus ,Ursidae ,Demography - Abstract
The Andean bear alopecia syndrome is a progressive and chronic condition documented in ex situ populations. Recent advances focus on treating symptoms, not preventing future cases. We therefore explored the epidemiology of this syndrome through an analysis of husbandry and veterinary conditions of 63 Andean bears (26M:37F) housed in North and South American zoos and other ex situ circumstances. We had the most complete information for the North American population and found that 29% of females (n = 24) were affected. No males (n = 26) were affected. An analysis of generalized linear models indicated that three models were competitive in describing the occurrence of the condition (i.e., ΔAICc ≤ 2): the model including only the individual's sex (χ2 = 13.41, df = 1, p
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- 2018
8. Inbreeding and inbreeding avoidance in wild giant pandas
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Yibo Hu, Zejun Zhang, Russell C. Van Horn, Xiaoguang Zheng, Wenliang Zhou, Ronald R. Swaisgood, Li Yan, Yonggang Nie, Zhixin Zhou, Tianxiao Ma, Wei Wei, and Fuwen Wei
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0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Male ,Population fragmentation ,China ,Population ,Zoology ,Population genetics ,Animals, Wild ,Biology ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,Sexual Behavior, Animal ,Genetics ,Inbreeding depression ,Inbreeding avoidance ,Animals ,Inbreeding ,education ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,education.field_of_study ,Habitat fragmentation ,Ecology ,Endangered Species ,030104 developmental biology ,Biological dispersal ,Female ,Animal Distribution ,Ursidae - Abstract
Inbreeding can have negative consequences on population and individual fitness, which could be counteracted by inbreeding avoidance mechanisms. However, the inbreeding risk and inbreeding avoidance mechanisms in endangered species are less studied. The giant panda, a solitary and threatened species, lives in many small populations and suffers from habitat fragmentation, which may aggravate the risk of inbreeding. Here, we performed long-term observations of reproductive behaviour, sampling of mother-cub pairs and large-scale genetic analyses on wild giant pandas. Moderate levels of inbreeding were found in 21.1% of mating pairs, 9.1% of parent pairs and 7.7% of panda cubs, but no high-level inbreeding occurred. More significant levels of inbreeding may be avoided passively by female-biased natal dispersal rather than by breeding dispersal or active relatedness-based mate choice mechanisms. The level of inbreeding in giant pandas is greater than expected for a solitary mammal and thus warrants concern for potential inbreeding depression, particularly in small populations isolated by continuing habitat fragmentation, which will reduce female dispersal and increase the risk of inbreeding.
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- 2017
9. Human visual identification of individual Andean bears Tremarctos ornatus
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Susanna Paisley, Corrin LaCombe, Russell C. Van Horn, Ximena Velez-Liendo, and Becky Zug
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biology ,Individual animal ,Ecology ,Identity (social science) ,Visual identification ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,biology.organism_classification ,Experimental testing ,Geography ,Population estimation ,Identification (biology) ,Tremarctos ornatus ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
It is often challenging to use invasive methods of individual animal identification for population estimation, demographic analyses, and other ecological and behavioral analyses focused on individual-level processes. Recent improvements in camera traps make it possible to collect many photographic samples yet most investigators either leap from photographic sampling to assignment of individual identity without considering identification errors, or else to avoid those errors they develop computerized methods that produce accurate data with the unintended cost of excluding participation by local citizens. To assess human ability to visually identify Andean bears Tremarctos ornatus from their pelage markings we used surveys and experimental testing of 381 observers viewing photographs of 70 Andean bears of known identity. Neither observer experience nor confidence predicted their initial success rate at identifying individuals. However, after gaining experience observers were able to achieve an average succe...
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- 2014
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10. Society, demography and genetic structure in the spotted hyena
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Heather E. Watts, Jennifer E. Smith, Russell C. Van Horn, Kay E. Holekamp, and Christopher C. Strelioff
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education.field_of_study ,biology ,Ecology ,Population ,Crocuta crocuta ,biology.organism_classification ,Social relation ,Hyena ,biology.animal ,Genetics ,Kinship ,Clan ,Socioecology ,education ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Sociality - Abstract
Spotted hyenas (Crocuta crocuta) are large mammalian carnivores, but their societies, called ‘clans’, resemble those of such cercopithecine primates as baboons and macaques with respect to their size, hierarchical structure, and frequency of social interaction among both kin and unrelated group-mates. However, in contrast to cercopithecine primates, spotted hyenas regularly hunt antelope and compete with group-mates for access to kills, which are extremely rich food sources, but also rare and ephemeral. This unique occurrence of baboon-like sociality among top-level predators has favoured the evolution of many unusual traits in this species. We briefly review the relevant socioecology of spotted hyenas, document great demographic variation but little variation in social structure across the species’ range, and describe the long-term fitness consequences of rank-related variation in resource access among clan-mates. We then summarize patterns of genetic relatedness within and between clans, including some from a population that had recently gone through a population bottleneck, and consider the roles of sexually dimorphic dispersal and female mate choice in the generation of these patterns. Finally, we apply social network theory under varying regimes of resource availability to analyse the effects of kinship on the stability of social relationships among members of one large hyena clan in Kenya. Although social bonds among both kin and non-kin are weakest when resource competition is most intense, hyenas sustain strong social relationships with kin year-round, despite constraints imposed by resource limitation. Our analyses suggest that selection might act on both individuals and matrilineal kin groups within clans containing multiple matrilines.
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- 2011
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11. Rub-tree selection by Andean bears in the Peruvian dry forest
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Russell C. Van Horn, Jon E. Swenson, Jack D. Kleiner, and Sam M. J. G. Steyaert
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0106 biological sciences ,Tropical and subtropical dry broadleaf forests ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,biology ,Land use ,Ecology ,Bursera graveolens ,Dry forest ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,010601 ecology ,Habitat ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Foothills ,Tremarctos ornatus ,Tree species ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Abstract
To advance our knowledge on the rubbing behavior of Andean bears (Tremarctos ornatus), we assessed characteristics of their rub-trees in the Peruvian tropical dry forest, where water is a rare and critical resource. We registered characteristics of rubbed and unrubbed trees and shrubs along bear trails in an area of approximately 100 km2 surrounding 7 waterholes in the western Andes foothills of Peru during austral summer 2014–2015. Analysis of 94 trees selected for rubbing (hereafter, rub-trees) and 253 available unmarked trees within a 5-m radius of each rub-tree showed that bears selected trees to rub that were relatively small and close to waterholes. Bears seemed to avoid the most common tree species, palo santo (Bursera graveolens), for tree-rubbing. We suggest that waterholes are important habitat features for Andean bears in the Peruvian dry forest, and that these sites be incorporated into conservation and land use management.
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- 2018
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12. Evolutionary forces favoring intragroup coalitions among spotted hyenas and other animals
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Katharine E. Graham, Kay E. Holekamp, Russell C. Van Horn, Katherine S. Powning, Jennifer E. Smith, Alison R. Cole, and Sandra K. Memenis
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biology ,Status quo ,Social connectedness ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Kin selection ,Crocuta crocuta ,biology.organism_classification ,Social group ,Kinship ,Agonistic behaviour ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Reciprocal altruism ,Social psychology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,media_common - Abstract
Coalitionary support in agonistic interactions represents cooperation because intervening in a fight is potentially costly to the donor of support but benefits the recipient. Here, we first review the characteristics of, and evolutionary forces favoring, intragroup coalitions in 49 species and find that patterns of intragroup coalition formation are remarkably similar between primates and nonprimates. We then test hypotheses suggesting kin selection, reciprocal altruism, and direct benefits as adaptive explanations for coalitionary interventions among adult female spotted hyenas (Crocuta crocuta) belonging to a large social group in Kenya. As predicted by kin selection theory, females supported close kin most often, and the density (connectedness) of cooperation networks increased with genetic relatedness. Nevertheless, kinship failed to protect females from coalitionary attacks. We found no evidence of enduring alliances based on reciprocal support among unrelated adult females. Instead, donors generally minimized costs to themselves, intervening most often during low-intensity fights and when feeding opportunities were unavailable. Females also gained direct benefits from directing coalitionary attacks toward subordinates. Finally, females monitored the number of dominant bystanders in the "audience" at fights and modified their level of cooperation based on this knowledge. Overall, hyenas made flexible decisions regarding whether or not to intervene in fights, modifying their tendency to cooperate based on multiple types of information about their immediate social and ecological environments. Taken together, these findings indicate that the combined evolutionary forces of kin selection and direct benefits derived from reinforcing the status quo drive coalitionary interventions among adult female spotted hyenas. Copyright 2010, Oxford University Press.
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- 2010
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13. 'Friendships' between new mothers and adult males: adaptive benefits and determinants in wild baboons (Papio cynocephalus)
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Russell C. Van Horn, Nga Nguyen, Jeanne Altmann, and Susan C. Alberts
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Offspring ,Infant Care ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,humanities ,Friendship ,Animal ecology ,Yellow baboon ,Harassment ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Mating ,Paternal care ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Demography ,media_common - Abstract
Close associations between adult males and lactating females and their dependent infants are not commonly described in non-monogamous mammals. However, such associations [sometimes called “friendships” (Smuts 1985)] are regularly observed in several primate species in which females mate with multiple males during the fertile period. The absence of mating exclusivity among “friends” suggests that males should invest little in infant care, raising questions about the adaptive significance of friendship bonds. Using data from genetic paternity analyses, patterns of behavior, and long-term demographic and reproductive records, we evaluated the extent to which friendships in four multi-male, multi-female yellow baboon (Papio cynocephalus) groups in Amboseli, Kenya represent joint parental care of offspring or male mating effort. We found evidence that mothers and infants benefited directly from friendships; friendships provided mother–infant dyads protection from harassment from other adult and immature females. In addition, nearly half of all male friends were the genetic fathers of offspring and had been observed mating with mothers during the days of most likely conception for those offspring. In contrast, nearly all friends who were not fathers were also not observed to consort with the mother during the days of most likely conception, suggesting that friendships between mothers and non-fathers did not result from paternity confusion. Finally, we found no evidence that prior friendship increased a male’s chances of mating with a female in future reproductive cycles. Our results suggest that, for many male–female pairs at Amboseli, friendships represented a form of biparental care of offspring. Males in the remaining friendship dyads may be trading protection of infants in exchange for some resources or services not yet identified. Our study is the first to find evidence that female primates gain social benefits from their early associations with adult males.
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- 2009
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14. Can't get there from here: inferring kinship from pairwise genetic relatedness
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Russell C. Van Horn, Jeanne Altmann, and Susan C. Alberts
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Genetic similarity ,Evolutionary biology ,Kinship ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Pairwise comparison ,Genetic relatedness ,Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Published
- 2008
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15. Divided destinies: group choice by female savannah baboons during social group fission
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Susan C. Alberts, Russell C. Van Horn, Jeanne Altmann, and Jason C. Buchan
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Adult female ,Behavioural sciences ,social sciences ,Biology ,Social group ,Dominance (ethology) ,Animal ecology ,Social partners ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,behavior and behavior mechanisms ,Kinship ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Group choice ,health care economics and organizations ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Demography - Abstract
Group living provides benefits to individuals while imposing costs on them. In species that live in permanent social groups, group division provides the only opportunity for nondispersing individuals to change their group membership and improve their benefit to cost ratio. We examined group choice by 81 adult female savannah baboons (Papio cynocephalus) during four fission events. We measured how each female’s group choice was affected by several factors: the presence of her maternal kin, paternal kin, age peers, and close social partners, her average kinship to groupmates, and her potential for improved dominance rank. Maternal kin, paternal kin, and close social partners influenced group choice by some females, but the relative importance of these factors varied across fissions. Age peers other than paternal kin had no effect on group choice, and average kinship to all groupmates had the same effect on group choice as did maternal kin alone. Most females were subordinate to fewer females after fissions than before, but status improvement did not drive female group choice; females often preferred to remain with social superiors who were their close maternal kin, rather than improving their own social ranks. We suggest that during permanent group fissions, female baboons prefer to remain with close maternal kin if those are abundant enough to influence their fitness; if they have too few close maternal kin then females prefer to remain with close paternal kin, and social bonds with nonkin might also become influential.
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- 2007
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16. Courtship and mating in free-living spotted hyenas
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Anne L. Engh, Micaela Szykman, Russell C. Van Horn, Erin E. Boydston, and Kay E. Holekamp
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Ejaculation ,Aggression ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Sire ,Proceptive phase ,Biology ,Crocuta crocuta ,biology.organism_classification ,Developmental psychology ,Courtship ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Female age ,medicine ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Mating ,medicine.symptom ,media_common ,Demography - Abstract
Female spotted hyenas (Crocuta crocuta) are larger and more aggressive than males, and their genitalia are heavily 'masculinized'. These odd traits in females pose unusual challenges for males during courtship and copulation. Here our goals were to describe and quantify the behavior patterns involved in courtship and copulation in Crocuta, and determine whether rates of affiliative behavior directed toward females by males vary with female age, social rank, or time to conception. We also inquired whether consort formation with a particular female was necessary for a male to sire that female's cubs. Behavioral observations and paternity data based on 12 microsatellite loci were collected over 11 years from free-ranging hyenas in Kenya. Several of the courtship displays exhibited by male hyenas differed from those found in other carnivores, and appeared to reflect intense motivational conflict between tendencies to approach and flee from females. Most male advances were either ignored by females or elicited aggression from females toward males. Rates of male affiliative behavior toward females peaked around the time of conception. Although males behaved similarly toward young and old females in the highest social rank category, males directed more affiliative behavior toward older than younger females that were mid- and low-ranking. Multiple short mounts usually preceded a long mount, but intromission and ejaculation appeared to occur only during long mounts. Female receptivity was indicated by inhibited aggression toward the male and assumption of a distinctive receptive stance. The only behavior indicative of female proceptivity was following of the male by the female in mating contexts. Some males who sired cubs formed consortships with females whereas others did not, suggesting that individual male hyenas may adopt alternative reproductive tactics to attract and acquire mates. Our results also suggest that low fertility may be an important cost of female virilization in this species.
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- 2007
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17. Sexually dimorphic patterns of space use throughout ontogeny in the spotted hyena ( Crocuta crocuta )
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Laura Smale, Kay E. Holekamp, Russell C. Van Horn, Erin E. Boydston, and Karen M. Kapheim
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Life span ,Ecology ,Ontogeny ,Space use ,Zoology ,Biology ,Crocuta crocuta ,biology.organism_classification ,Sexual dimorphism ,Hyena ,biology.animal ,Biological dispersal ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Observational and telemetry data were used in a geographic information system database to document the ontogenetic development of sexually dimorphic patterns of space use among free-living spotted hyenas Crocuta crocuta in Kenya. No measures of space use were sexually dimorphic among den-dwelling cubs, nor were sex differences apparent among hyenas that had ceased using dens for shelter until these animals were c. 30 months of age. Significant sex differences emerged late in the third year of life, and persisted throughout the remainder of the life span; males were found farther from the geographic centre of the natal territory than were females, and the mean size of individual 95 % utility distributions was larger for males than females. Most dispersal events by radio-collared males were preceded by a series of exploratory excursions outside the natal territory. All collared males dispersed, but no collared females did so. Most dispersing males moved only one or two home ranges away at dispersal, roughly 8–10 km distant from the natal territory, before settling in a new social group.
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- 2005
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18. Locus effects and sources of error in noninvasive genotyping
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Elizabeth A. Archie, Susan C. Alberts, Cynthia J. Moss, Russell C. Van Horn, and Jason C. Buchan
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Genetics ,Faecal dna ,Ecology ,education ,Microsatellite ,Locus (genetics) ,Computational biology ,Allele ,Biology ,Sources of error ,Biochemistry ,Genotyping ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology - Abstract
In spite of more than a decade of research on noninvasive genetic sampling, the low quality and quantity of DNA in noninvasive studies continue to plague researchers. Effects of locus size on error have been documented but are still poorly understood. Further, sources of error other than allelic dropout have been described but are often not well quantified. Here we analyse the effects of locus size on allelic dropout, amplification success and error rates in noninvasive genotyping studies of three species, and quantify error other than allelic dropout.
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- 2005
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19. Role-Reversed Nepotism Among Cubs and Sires in the Spotted Hyena (Crocuta crocuta)
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Sofia A. Wahaj, Kay E. Holekamp, and Russell C. Van Horn
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biology ,Kin recognition ,Ecology ,Aggression ,Offspring ,Crocuta crocuta ,biology.organism_classification ,Social relation ,Hyena ,Nepotism ,biology.animal ,medicine ,Animal Science and Zoology ,medicine.symptom ,Paternal care ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Demography - Abstract
Nepotism is widespread among parents and offspring, and is typically associated with fundamental asymmetries; parents can usually do more to help their offspring than vice versa, andthe cost of a given nepotistic behavior is usually less for parents than for offspring. This may not be so among spotted hyenas (Crocuta crocuta); sires never achieve social rank equal to that of their cubs, to whom they provide no obvious paternal care. Nepotism by sires towards their cubs is thus socially constrained. However, the higher social status of cubs might offset cubs developmental disadvantages and permit nepotistic treatment of sires by offspring. We therefore sought to determine whether the interactions among spottedhyena cubs andad ult males were influencedby kinship, using long-term observations from one clan of spottedhyenas. Sires exhibitedno overt nepotism towards their cubs in most behaviors, but they did associate more closely with their daughters than with unrelated control females. Sires also associatedmore closely with their daughters than with their sons, with whom they associatedno more closely than they d idwith unrelatedcontrol males. Cubs favored their sires by directing less intense aggression towards them than towards unrelatedcontrol males. Cubs of both sexes also associatedmore closely with their sires than with control males after the cubs were independent of the clan’s communal den. Although sires evidently recognize their offspring, paternal nepotism by sires towards their cubs is weaker than filial nepotism by cubs towards their sires. The small size and immaturity of cubs thus appear to be weaker constraints on nepotism than is the low social status of their sires.
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- 2004
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20. Behavioural structuring of relatedness in the spotted hyena (Crocuta crocuta) suggests direct fitness benefits of clan-level cooperation
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Kim T. Scribner, Kay E. Holekamp, Anne L. Engh, Stephan M. Funk, and Russell C. Van Horn
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biology ,Ecology ,Crocuta crocuta ,biology.organism_classification ,Intraspecific competition ,Social group ,Hyena ,Mate choice ,Evolutionary biology ,biology.animal ,Genetic structure ,Genetics ,Biological dispersal ,Clan ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Spotted hyenas (Crocuta crocuta) are gregarious carnivores that live in multigenerational social groups, called clans, containing one to several matrilines. Members of multiple matrilines within a clan cooperate during dangerous interactions with inter- and intraspecific competitors. The evolution of cooperation may be influenced by relatedness between individuals, which in turn is influenced by reproductive skew and mate choice, dispersal and territorial behaviours. Behavioural data exist for spotted hyenas, but corresponding data on patterns of relatedness are unavailable; this lack of data makes it difficult to assess the relative importance of selection pressures favouring cooperative behaviour within and among groups. Therefore we conducted a longitudinal analysis of relatedness within a single large clan of spotted hyenas, as well as a cross-sectional analysis of relatedness among hyenas from multiple clans. Within a clan, patterns of relatedness reflected known pedigree relationships, and relatedness was higher within than among matrilines, even across generations. Although mean within-matriline relatedness varied among matrilines, it did not decline with matriline rank. On average, clan members were not related closely, due to high levels of male-mediated gene flow among clans, and relatedness declined very slightly across clan borders. Low mean relatedness within clans suggests that spotted hyenas cooperate with unrelated clan-mates against close paternal kin in other clans. Our data also suggest that spotted hyenas must derive large net direct fitness benefits from group living and cooperation.
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- 2004
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21. ANTIBODIES TO CANINE AND FELINE VIRUSES IN SPOTTED HYENAS (CROCUTA CROCUTA) IN THE MASAI MARA NATIONAL RESERVE
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Edward J. Dubovi, Russell C. Van Horn, Linda Munson, Jonna A.K. Mazet, Anne L. Engh, Tara M. Harrison, Keith Nelson, and Kay E. Holekamp
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Male ,Feline coronavirus ,Feline immunodeficiency virus ,Parvovirus, Canine ,viruses ,Carnivora ,Animals, Wild ,Feline panleukopenia ,Immunodeficiency Virus, Feline ,Biology ,Antibodies, Viral ,Crocuta crocuta ,medicine.disease_cause ,Dogs ,Sex Factors ,Risk Factors ,Seroepidemiologic Studies ,biology.animal ,medicine ,Animals ,Varicellovirus ,Coronavirus, Feline ,Distemper Virus, Canine ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Disease Reservoirs ,Feline calicivirus ,Ecology ,Canine distemper ,Age Factors ,Canine parvovirus ,virus diseases ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Virology ,Hyena ,Virus Diseases ,Africa ,Cats ,Female ,Feline Panleukopenia Virus ,Calicivirus, Feline - Abstract
Spotted hyenas (Crocuta crocuta) are abundant predators in the Serengeti ecosystem and interact with other species of wild carnivores and domestic animals in ways that could encourage disease transmission. Hyenas also have a unique hierarchical social system that might affect the flow of pathogens. Antibodies to canine distemper virus (CDV), feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV), feline panleukopenia virus/canine parvovirus (FPLV/CPV), feline coronavirus/ feline infectious peritonitis virus (FECV/IPV), feline calicivirus (FCV), and feline herpesvirus 1 (FHV1) have been detected in other Serengeti predators, indicating that these viruses are present in the ecosystem. The purpose of this study was to determine whether spotted hyenas also had been infected with these viruses and to assess risk factors for infection. Serum samples were collected between 1993 and 2001 from 119 animals in a single clan for which behavioral data on social structure were available and from 121 hyenas ill several other clans. All animals resided in the Masai Mara National Reserve. Antibodies to CDV, FIV, FPLV/CPV, FECV/FIPV, FCV, and FHV1 were present in 47%, 3.5%, 81%, 36%, 72%, and 0.5% of study hyenas, respectively. Antibody prevalence was greater in adults for FIV and FECV/FIPV, and being a female of high social rank was a risk factor for FIV. Hyenas near human habitation appeared to be at lower risk to have CDV, FIV, and FECV/FIPV antibodies, whereas being near human habitation increased the risk for FPLV/CPV antibodies. Canine (distemper virus and FECV/FIPV antibody prevalence varied considerably over time, whereas FIV, FPLV/CPV, and FCV had a stable, apparently endemic temporal pattern. These results indicate that hyenas might play a role in the ecology of these viruses in the Serengeti ecosystem. The effect of these viruses on hyena health should be further investigated. The lower prevalence of CDV antibody-positive hyenas near human habitation suggests that reservoirs for CDV other than domestic dogs are present in the Serengeti ecosystem.
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- 2004
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22. AGE ESTIMATION AND DISPERSAL IN THE SPOTTED HYENA (CROCUTA CROCUTA)
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Russell C. Van Horn, Kay E. Holekamp, and Teresa L. McElhinny
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Ecology ,biology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Longevity ,Crocuta crocuta ,biology.organism_classification ,Social relation ,Social group ,Hyena ,Age estimation ,biology.animal ,Genetics ,Biological dispersal ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,media_common ,Demography - Abstract
We used observations of known-age, free-ranging spotted hyenas (Crocuta crocuta) from a large social group to develop age-estimation models. A model based on tooth-eruption data estimates the ages of animals 10.0–15.5 (±1.1 SD) months old. We used tooth-wear data to estimate the ages of adult males ±4.9 months and ages of females ±22.6 months. Analysis of known and estimated ages shows that males usually disperse from their natal group when 24–60 months of age. Eight of 20 males whose fates were known lived in 3 groups over time, and at least 7 of 41 resident immigrant males appeared to arrive in the study group years after leaving their birthplaces. Thus, males of this species often engage in multiple dispersal events.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Reproductive skew among males in a female-dominated mammalian society
- Author
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Stephan M. Funk, Michael William Bruford, Russell C. Van Horn, Laura Smale, Anne L. Engh, Kay E. Holekamp, Scot V. Libants, Kim T. Scribner, and Micaela Szykman
- Subjects
education.field_of_study ,biology ,Reproductive success ,Ecology ,Sire ,Population ,Crocuta crocuta ,biology.organism_classification ,Hyena ,Mate choice ,biology.animal ,Sexual selection ,Biological dispersal ,Animal Science and Zoology ,education ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Demography - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to document patterns of reproductive skew among male spotted hyenas (Crocuta crocuta), a species in which many normal mammalian sex roles are reversed. We used paternity determined from 12 microsatellite markers together with demographic and behavioral data collected over 10 years from a free-living population to document relationships among reproductive success (RS), social rank, and dispersal status of male hyenas. Our data suggest that dispersal status and length of residence are the strongest determinants of RS. Natal males comprise over 20% of the adult male population, yet they sire only 3% of cubs, whereas immigrants sire 97%. This reproductive advantage to immigrants accrues despite the fact that immigrants are socially subordinate to all adult natal males, and it provides a compelling ultimate explanation for primary dispersal in this species. High-ranking immigrants do not monopolize reproduction, and tenure accounts for more of the variance in male reproductive success than does social rank. Immigrant male hyenas rarely fight among themselves, so combat between rivals may be a relatively ineffectual mode of sexual selection in this species. Instead, female choice of mates appears to play an important role in determining patterns of paternity in Crocuta. Our data support a "limited control" model of reproductive skew in this species, in which female choice may play a more important role in limiting control by dominant males than do power struggles among males. Copyright 2002.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Association patterns among male and female spotted hyenas ( Crocuta crocuta ) reflect male mate choice
- Author
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Kim T. Scribner, Stephan M. Funk, Russell C. Van Horn, Anne L. Engh, Kay E. Holekamp, and Micaela Szykman
- Subjects
education.field_of_study ,Reproductive success ,Population ,Zoology ,Biology ,Fecundity ,Crocuta crocuta ,biology.organism_classification ,Mate choice ,Animal ecology ,Sexual selection ,Animal Science and Zoology ,education ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Social status - Abstract
Although female animals tend to be choosier than males in selecting mates, sexual selection theory predicts that males should also be choosy when female fecundity varies. Reproductive success among female spotted hyenas varies greatly with social rank. Our goals were therefore to determine whether male hyenas preferentially associate with high-ranking females, and whether male preferences are affected by female reproductive state. Interactions between adult males and females were observed intensively, and association indices calculated for all male-female pairs, over a 7-year period in one population of free-living hyenas. Males initiated most affiliative interactions with females, and males associated most closely with females that were likeliest to be fertile. High- and middle-ranking males associated most closely with high-ranking females, but low-ranking males associated equally closely with females in all rank categories. We used molecular markers to determine the paternity of cubs born during the study period, and found that sires associated more closely with the mothers of those cubs than did non-sires, particularly during the last months before conception. These association data indicate that male spotted hyenas do indeed exhibit selective mate choice, and that they prefer females likeliest to maximize male reproductive success.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Disinfectant Effects on Capture Rates of Deer Mice (Peromyscus maniculatus)
- Author
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Richard J. Douglass and Russell C. Van Horn
- Subjects
endocrine system ,Peromyscus ,Animal science ,biology ,Disinfectant ,Zoology ,biology.organism_classification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Live-trapping was conducted to determine the influence of trap disinfection on trapping success. Deer mice (Peromyscus maniculatus) on most (83.3%, n = 6) grids were equally likely to be caught in traps recently (≤8 h) or previously (≥5 d) disinfected. Traps were as likely to recapture mice previously captured in the other treatment as mice previously captured in the same treatment.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Society, demography and genetic structure in the spotted hyena
- Author
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Kay E, Holekamp, Jennifer E, Smith, Christopher C, Strelioff, Russell C, Van Horn, and Heather E, Watts
- Subjects
Dominance-Subordination ,Male ,Competitive Behavior ,Sexual Behavior, Animal ,Population Dynamics ,Animals ,Genetic Variation ,Female ,Hyaenidae ,Hierarchy, Social ,Kenya - Abstract
Spotted hyenas (Crocuta crocuta) are large mammalian carnivores, but their societies, called 'clans', resemble those of such cercopithecine primates as baboons and macaques with respect to their size, hierarchical structure, and frequency of social interaction among both kin and unrelated group-mates. However, in contrast to cercopithecine primates, spotted hyenas regularly hunt antelope and compete with group-mates for access to kills, which are extremely rich food sources, but also rare and ephemeral. This unique occurrence of baboon-like sociality among top-level predators has favoured the evolution of many unusual traits in this species. We briefly review the relevant socio-ecology of spotted hyenas, document great demographic variation but little variation in social structure across the species' range, and describe the long-term fitness consequences of rank-related variation in resource access among clan-mates. We then summarize patterns of genetic relatedness within and between clans, including some from a population that had recently gone through a population bottleneck, and consider the roles of sexually dimorphic dispersal and female mate choice in the generation of these patterns. Finally, we apply social network theory under varying regimes of resource availability to analyse the effects of kinship on the stability of social relationships among members of one large hyena clan in Kenya. Although social bonds among both kin and non-kin are weakest when resource competition is most intense, hyenas sustain strong social relationships with kin year-round, despite constraints imposed by resource limitation. Our analyses suggest that selection might act on both individuals and matrilineal kin groups within clans containing multiple matrilines.
- Published
- 2011
27. Kin discrimination in the spotted hyena (Crocuta crocuta): nepotism among siblings
- Author
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Toni L. Van Horn, Ryan Hilgris, Russell C. Van Horn, Rachel Dreyer, Sofia A. Wahaj, Kay E. Holekamp, and Jessica Schwarz
- Subjects
Kin recognition ,biology ,Aggression ,Kin selection ,Crocuta crocuta ,biology.organism_classification ,Social relation ,Hyena ,Animal ecology ,Evolutionary biology ,biology.animal ,medicine ,Animal Science and Zoology ,medicine.symptom ,Sibling ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
We examined patterns of affiliation, association, and aggression to inquire whether spotted hyenas (Crocuta crocuta) can distinguish among various groups of maternal and paternal siblings. If so, and if these animals conform to predictions of kin selection theory, then behavioral interactions among hyenas should vary with relatedness. We also considered familiarity-based recognition and phenotype matching as mechanisms hyenas might use to recognize kin. Patterns of affiliative behavior indicated that hyenas favored full-sibling littermates over half-sibling littermates or any other group of half-siblings. Rates of dyadic aggression generally did not vary with kinship. Hyenas associated more closely with half-sibling littermates than with non-littermate half-siblings, and hyenas affiliated more with maternal half-siblings than with paternal half-siblings, suggesting that familiarity-based cues might mediate discrimination among these sibling classes. In addition, operation of a phenotype-matching mechanism was suggested by the preference hyenas demonstrated during affiliative interactions for full- over half-sibling littermates, and by their lack of preference in these interactions for half-sibling littermates over non-littermate half-siblings. Phenotype matching was also suggested by our observation that paternal half-siblings cooperated more, and fought less, than did non-kin. Our data indicate that hyenas can discriminate among various types of siblings, that their social behavior conforms to predictions of kin selection theory, and that they recognize kin using mechanisms of both familiarity and phenotype matching.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Behavioural structuring of relatedness in the spotted hyena (Crocuta crocuta) suggests direct fitness benefits of clan-level cooperation
- Author
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Russell C, Van Horn, Anne L, Engh, Kim T, Scribner, Stephan M, Funk, and Kay E, Holekamp
- Subjects
Base Sequence ,Carnivora ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Inheritance Patterns ,Animals ,Hierarchy, Social ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,Cooperative Behavior ,Selection, Genetic ,Biological Evolution ,Kenya ,Microsatellite Repeats ,Pedigree - Abstract
Spotted hyenas (Crocuta crocuta) are gregarious carnivores that live in multigenerational social groups, called clans, containing one to several matrilines. Members of multiple matrilines within a clan cooperate during dangerous interactions with inter- and intraspecific competitors. The evolution of cooperation may be influenced by relatedness between individuals, which in turn is influenced by reproductive skew and mate choice, dispersal and territorial behaviours. Behavioural data exist for spotted hyenas, but corresponding data on patterns of relatedness are unavailable; this lack of data makes it difficult to assess the relative importance of selection pressures favouring cooperative behaviour within and among groups. Therefore we conducted a longitudinal analysis of relatedness within a single large clan of spotted hyenas, as well as a cross-sectional analysis of relatedness among hyenas from multiple clans. Within a clan, patterns of relatedness reflected known pedigree relationships, and relatedness was higher within than among matrilines, even across generations. Although mean within-matriline relatedness varied among matrilines, it did not decline with matriline rank. On average, clan members were not related closely, due to high levels of male-mediated gene flow among clans, and relatedness declined very slightly across clan borders. Low mean relatedness within clans suggests that spotted hyenas cooperate with unrelated clan-mates against close paternal kin in other clans. Our data also suggest that spotted hyenas must derive large net direct fitness benefits from group living and cooperation.
- Published
- 2004
29. Do female hyaenas choose mates based on tenure?
- Author
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Kay E. Holekamp, Russell C. Van Horn, and Heather E. Watts
- Subjects
Male ,Time Factors ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Alternative hypothesis ,Reproducibility of Results ,Mating Preference, Animal ,Crocuta crocuta ,biology.organism_classification ,Preference ,Social group ,Animals ,Biological dispersal ,Female ,Hyaenidae ,Inbreeding ,Social Behavior ,Psychology ,Demography - Abstract
Arising from: O. P. Honer et al. , 798–801 (2007)10.1038/nature06040 ; Honer et al. reply In their investigation into whether female mate-choice drives male dispersal, Honer et al.1 argue that female spotted hyaenas (Crocuta crocuta) prefer mates whose tenure in the social group is less than the females’ age, to avoid paternal incest, and suggest that male dispersal reflects this preference. However, we are not persuaded that females choose mates on the basis of tenure because Honer et al.1 overlook the alternative hypothesis that dispersal status itself is important in female mate-choice2,3, such that females prefer immigrants over natal males. Like mate-choice based on tenure, choice based on dispersal status reduces the risk of incest.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Sexually dimorphic patterns of space use throughout ontogeny in the spotted hyena (Crocuta crocuta).
- Author
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Erin E. Boydston, Karen M. Kapheim, Russell C. Van Horn, Laura Smale, and Kay E. Holekamp
- Subjects
BIOTELEMETRY ,GEOGRAPHIC information systems ,ANIMAL populations ,ONTOGENY ,HYENAS ,CROCUTA - Abstract
Observational and telemetry data were used in a geographic information system database to document the ontogenetic development of sexually dimorphic patterns of space use among free-living spotted hyenas Crocuta crocuta in Kenya. No measures of space use were sexually dimorphic among den-dwelling cubs, nor were sex differences apparent among hyenas that had ceased using dens for shelter until these animals were c. 30 months of age. Significant sex differences emerged late in the third year of life, and persisted throughout the remainder of the life span; males were found farther from the geographic centre of the natal territory than were females, and the mean size of individual 95% utility distributions was larger for males than females. Most dispersal events by radio-collared males were preceded by a series of exploratory excursions outside the natal territory. All collared males dispersed, but no collared females did so. Most dispersing males moved only one or two home ranges away at dispersal, roughly 8–10 km distant from the natal territory, before settling in a new social group. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Reproductive skew among males in a female-dominated mammalian society.
- Author
-
Anne L. Engh, Stephan M. Funk, Russell C. Van Horn, Kim T. Scribner, Michael W. Bruford, Scot Libants, Micaela Szykman, Laura Smale, and Kay E. Holekamp
- Subjects
CROCUTA ,ANIMAL sexual behavior ,ANIMAL fighting ,HYENAS - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to document patterns of reproductive skew among male spotted hyenas (Crocuta crocuta), a species in which many normal mammalian sex roles are reversed. We used paternity determined from 12 microsatellite markers together with demographic and behavioral data collected over 10 years from a free-living population to document relationships among reproductive success (RS), social rank, and dispersal status of male hyenas. Our data suggest that dispersal status and length of residence are the strongest determinants of RS. Natal males comprise over 20% of the adult male population, yet they sire only 3% of cubs, whereas immigrants sire 97%. This reproductive advantage to immigrants accrues despite the fact that immigrants are socially subordinate to all adult natal males, and it provides a compelling ultimate explanation for primary dispersal in this species. High-ranking immigrants do not monopolize reproduction, and tenure accounts for more of the variance in male reproductive success than does social rank. Immigrant male hyenas rarely fight among themselves, so combat between rivals may be a relatively ineffectual mode of sexual selection in this species. Instead, female choice of mates appears to play an important role in determining patterns of paternity in Crocuta. Our data support a “limited control” model of reproductive skew in this species, in which female choice may play a more important role in limiting control by dominant males than do power struggles among males. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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