Non-human primates avoid the detrimental effects of prenatal androgen exposure in mixed-sex litters:combined demographic, behavioral, and genetic analyses

  • Bradley, Brenda J.
  • Snowdon, Charles T.
  • McGrew, William C.
  • Lawler, Richard R.
  • Guevara, Elaine E.
  • McIntosh, Annick
  • O'Connor, Timothy
Publication date
July 2016

Abstract

Producing single versus multiple births has important life history trade-offs, including the potential benefits and risks of sharing a common in utero environment. Sex hormones can diffuse through amniotic fluid and fetal membranes, and females with male littermates risk exposure to high levels of fetal testosterone, which are shown to have masculinizing effects and negative fitness consequences in many mammals. Whereas most primates give birth to single offspring, several New World monkey and strepsirrhine species regularly give birth to small litters. We examined whether neonatal testosterone exposure might be detrimental to females in mixed-sex litters by compiling data from long-term breeding records for seven primate species (Saguinus ...

Extracted data

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