The Evolution of Allomothering Behavior Among Colobine Monkeys: Function and Opportunism in Evolution
Open Access
- 1 December 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in American Anthropologist
- Vol. 81 (4) , 818-840
- https://doi.org/10.1525/aa.1979.81.4.02a00040
Abstract
The great majority of Old World monkey females are interested in infants, particularly very young ones. Characteristically, females will approach infants cradled by their mothers and subsequently attempt to touch or hold them. For Cercopithecine monkeys, the subfamily that includes the baboons and macaques, caretaking attempts by females other than the mother are ordinarily unsuccessful, at least during the first two or three weeks of life. Mothers are highly possessive of their offspring and will not surrender them to substitute infant‐caretakers. In striking contrast, among the other major subfamily of Old World monkeys, the Colobines, mothers readily allow extensive and sometimes prolonged infant carrying and handling by other females (allomothering), even on the first day of life. This paper reviews the traditional functional explanations for these different maternal systems. Stressing opportunism in evolution, the paper suggests that the social and/or genetic benefits alone are not adequate to account for the origins of allomothering behavior among Colobines. Instead, emphasis is given to the kind of ancestral social structure and its environmental context that might allow such a behavioral system to begin. It is hypothesized that, relative to the Cercopithecines, who do not exhibit infant‐sharing, the dental morphology and digestive system of the Colobines produced food‐acquiring and food‐processing advantages that, in effect, reduced intragroup feeding competition and, concomitantly, reduced the importance of status differences between females. Such a social structure could permit the emergence of allomothering behavior since, for all the participants in this activity pattern, there are varying benefits that contribute to individual fitness. [Colobine, allomothering, functions, opportunism, dietary adaptations, social structure]This publication has 47 references indexed in Scilit:
- Differential Habitat Utilization of Four Cercopithecidae in a Kenyan ForestFolia Primatologica, 1977
- Fermentative digestion of food in the colobus monkey,Colobus polykomosCellular and Molecular Life Sciences, 1976
- Infant sharing in the family colobidae emphasizingPygathrixPrimates, 1972
- Ruminant-Like Digestion of the Langur MonkeyScience, 1968
- The Nilgiri langur (Presbytis johnii) mother-infant dyadPrimates, 1968
- On the social change of hanuman langurs (Presbytis entellus) in their natural conditionPrimates, 1965
- Zur Kenntnis von Bau und Funktion des Magens der Schlankaffen (Colobinae)Folia Primatologica, 1964
- The genetical evolution of social behaviour. IJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1964
- Paternal care in the wild Japanese monkey,Macaca fuscata fuscataPrimates, 1959
- On the rank system in a natural group of Japanese monkey (I)Primates, 1958