<p>In chimpanzees, most females disperse from the community in which they were born to reproduce in a new community, thereby eliminating the risk of inbreeding with close kin. However, across sites, some females breed in their natal community, raising questions about the flexibility of dispersal, the costs and benefits of different strategies and the mitigation of costs associated with dispersal and integration. In this dissertation I address these questions by combining long-term behavioral data and recent field observations on maturing and young adult females in Gombe National Park with an experimental manipulation of relationship formation in captive apes in the Congo.</p><p>To assess the risk of inbreeding for females who do and do not ...
The study was funded by an ERC grant (prilang 283871) to KZ and funding from the University of Neuch...
Abstract Characterizing animal dispersal patterns and the rational behind individuals’ transfer choi...
Investment in social interaction and affiliative behaviour is often related to variation in sex-spec...
In most social mammals, members of either one sex or both leave their natal group at sexual maturity...
Inbreeding adversely affects fitness, whereas heterozygosity often augments it. Therefore, mechanism...
Evaluating the factors influencing the patterns of female dispersal in mammals is critical to unders...
Chimpanzees are one of the few species where males consistently remain in and females typically disp...
In most primate societies, strong and enduring social bonds form preferentially among kin, who benef...
Chimpanzees are frequently used to illustrate the relationship between sex differences in dispersal ...
Female chimpanzees with dependent offspring generally avoid border areas of their community's home r...
This single file contains detailed information on the paternity assignment procedure, including genb...
A large body of theoretical and empirical research suggests that kinship influences the development ...
A large body of theoretical and empirical research suggests that kinship influences the development ...
la ial 199 anz believed that social evolution in this species occurs in the context of the recogniza...
Inbreeding (reproduction between relatives) often decreases the fitness of offspring and is thus exp...
The study was funded by an ERC grant (prilang 283871) to KZ and funding from the University of Neuch...
Abstract Characterizing animal dispersal patterns and the rational behind individuals’ transfer choi...
Investment in social interaction and affiliative behaviour is often related to variation in sex-spec...
In most social mammals, members of either one sex or both leave their natal group at sexual maturity...
Inbreeding adversely affects fitness, whereas heterozygosity often augments it. Therefore, mechanism...
Evaluating the factors influencing the patterns of female dispersal in mammals is critical to unders...
Chimpanzees are one of the few species where males consistently remain in and females typically disp...
In most primate societies, strong and enduring social bonds form preferentially among kin, who benef...
Chimpanzees are frequently used to illustrate the relationship between sex differences in dispersal ...
Female chimpanzees with dependent offspring generally avoid border areas of their community's home r...
This single file contains detailed information on the paternity assignment procedure, including genb...
A large body of theoretical and empirical research suggests that kinship influences the development ...
A large body of theoretical and empirical research suggests that kinship influences the development ...
la ial 199 anz believed that social evolution in this species occurs in the context of the recogniza...
Inbreeding (reproduction between relatives) often decreases the fitness of offspring and is thus exp...
The study was funded by an ERC grant (prilang 283871) to KZ and funding from the University of Neuch...
Abstract Characterizing animal dispersal patterns and the rational behind individuals’ transfer choi...
Investment in social interaction and affiliative behaviour is often related to variation in sex-spec...