A heterosexual group of nonreproductive rhesus ( Macaca mulatto ) containing vasectomized males was compared with a matched control group containing intact males. Comparisons were made on data collected before the birth of the first infant in the control group. Three Darwinian a priori hypotheses were used to predict differences between groups. The first hypothesis correctly predicted more affiliative and sexual behavior among experimental heterosexual dyads. The results did not support the second hypothesis that predicted less affiliation between experimental males. The third hypothesis correctly predicted that heterosexual affiliation and sexual behavior would occur between more of the possible ...
Group-living carries significant costs: disease transmission, resource competition, reproductive int...
Group-living carries significant costs: disease transmission, resource competition, reproductive int...
ABSTRACT: In female-bonded primate species, there is cross-generational consistency in female affili...
Affiliation is often used as an intervening variable in behavioral studies of nonhuman primates. Var...
abstract: Behavior of males and females may be mediated by their biological differences and, among c...
Birth season adult heterosexual nonkin relationships of 50 free-ranging female rhesus macaques ( Mac...
Female mate choice, a potentially powerful selective force, has received little systematic attention...
This research project, conducted at Cayo Santiago, Puerto Rico, studied 48 free-ranging female rhesu...
Whether animals ever exhibit a preference for same-sex sexual partners is a subject of debate. Japan...
Prior research has shown that estrous female rhesus macaques (Mucacu rnuluttu) maintain spatial prox...
In multimale groups where females mate promiscuously, male–infant associations have rarely been stud...
Males and females have different sexual interests and subsequently may show conflicting sexual strat...
One of the basic tenets of sexual selection is that male reproductive success should be large in pol...
Prior research has shown that estrous female rhesus macaques ( Macaca mulatto ) maintain spatial pro...
The purpose of this study was to investigate male preference and to define the aspects of females th...
Group-living carries significant costs: disease transmission, resource competition, reproductive int...
Group-living carries significant costs: disease transmission, resource competition, reproductive int...
ABSTRACT: In female-bonded primate species, there is cross-generational consistency in female affili...
Affiliation is often used as an intervening variable in behavioral studies of nonhuman primates. Var...
abstract: Behavior of males and females may be mediated by their biological differences and, among c...
Birth season adult heterosexual nonkin relationships of 50 free-ranging female rhesus macaques ( Mac...
Female mate choice, a potentially powerful selective force, has received little systematic attention...
This research project, conducted at Cayo Santiago, Puerto Rico, studied 48 free-ranging female rhesu...
Whether animals ever exhibit a preference for same-sex sexual partners is a subject of debate. Japan...
Prior research has shown that estrous female rhesus macaques (Mucacu rnuluttu) maintain spatial prox...
In multimale groups where females mate promiscuously, male–infant associations have rarely been stud...
Males and females have different sexual interests and subsequently may show conflicting sexual strat...
One of the basic tenets of sexual selection is that male reproductive success should be large in pol...
Prior research has shown that estrous female rhesus macaques ( Macaca mulatto ) maintain spatial pro...
The purpose of this study was to investigate male preference and to define the aspects of females th...
Group-living carries significant costs: disease transmission, resource competition, reproductive int...
Group-living carries significant costs: disease transmission, resource competition, reproductive int...
ABSTRACT: In female-bonded primate species, there is cross-generational consistency in female affili...