AI Article Synopsis

  • Female primates, especially mothers, play a crucial role in the social development of their offspring, but their parenting styles can vary significantly, particularly in terms of protectiveness and rejection.
  • This study observed two species of macaques with different dominance styles: the less tolerant Japanese macaques and the more tolerant moor macaques, to see how these styles influenced maternal behavior and offspring development.
  • Findings indicated that maternal behaviors, such as proximity and grooming, changed differently as the offspring matured, with distinct impacts on the offspring's independent interactions and play based on their mother's style of care.

Article Abstract

Female primates represent the most important social partner for their developing offspring. However, mothers may strongly differ in the way they relate to their offspring (e.g., in terms of two different dimensions: protectiveness and rejection). In this study, we aimed to assess how dominance style predicts (i) changes in maternal behavior through offspring development, and (ii) the link between maternal behavior and offspring behavior. We conducted behavioral observations on 34 free-ranging immatures of two species of macaques with different dominance styles: less tolerant Japanese macaques (JM; Macaca fuscata) and more tolerant moor macaques (MM; Macaca maura). Our results showed that maternal behavior differed between JM and MM: maternal proximity and grooming decreased through offspring development more quickly in MM than in JM, whereas maternal rejection and aggression, which were generally more frequent in JM, decreased with offspring age similarly in both species. In contrast, maternal restraint of offspring decreased similarly with offspring age in both species. Furthermore, dominance style was differentially associated with the link between maternal and offspring behavior: in MM only, maternal grooming predicted an increase of the probability that offspring interacted with partners other than their mothers and engaged in solitary play, whereas maternal rejection predicted a decrease in the occurrence of solitary play. Overall, these results suggest interspecific variation in maternal behavior during offspring's first years of life, and point to the possibility that these differences may have an important role in shaping their behavioral development.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ajp.23461DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

maternal behavior
16
offspring behavior
12
decreased offspring
12
maternal
11
offspring
10
maternal offspring
8
moor macaques
8
dominance style
8
behavior offspring
8
offspring development
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!