Showing posts with label Heterogeneous regimes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Heterogeneous regimes. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 22, 2020

Summary: An exploratory analysis of developmental plasticity... [CB Jones]

Jones CB (2005) An exploratory analysis of developmental plasticity in Costa Rican mantled howler monkeys (Alouatta palliata palliata Gray). In A. Estrada, PA Garber, MSM Pavelka, LeA Luecke (eds.), New perspectives in the study of Mesoamerican primates: distribution, ecology, behavior, and conservation. Springer, New York.

Summary: The topic of developmental plasticity is fundamentally related to life-history evolution (West-Eberhard 2003), in particular, patterns of survival and reproduction. Jones (1997b) employed matrix analysis (see Alberts & Altmann 2003) of Scott's census data with age structure for mantled howlers at Hacienda La Pacifica to estimate life-history parameters including survivorship, fecundity, and mortality. The suite of life-history traits described by this author (e.g., low survivorship in more than one age class, iteroparity, relatively small reproductive effort) is consistent with the view that mantled howlers, and, possibly other members of the genus, express tactics and strategies minimizing costs to fecundity. Since changes in CC [Chest Circumference] and/or CC:P [Chest Circumference : Pubis Width] are irreversible morphological changes, it is proposed that female mantled howlers are capable of responding to local conditions with mechanisms of developmental plasticity, a within-individual strategy compatible with the life-history strategy of mantled howlers (Meyers & Bull 2002; Table 1; see Ravosa et al. 1993). Further research is required to test alternate hypotheses for the present results (e.g., natural selection [C.P. Groves, pers. comm.; F. Nihout, pers. comm.]) and to examine the possibility that there is a threshold of response to locally stressful conditions in irrigation habitat exhibited by female howlers and manifested as developmental plasticity in CC and CC:P.

The present report is consistent with the program of Stearns et al. (2003: 311) expressed in the following statement: "Alternative explanations for characteristic male and female growth schedules, and the consequences of the patterns seen in each species...all call for investigation across the spectrum of primate social systems." The study of the functional ecology, including physiological ecology and developmental plasticity, of primates is in its early stages (Milton 1998; also see Strier 1992; Ravosa et al. 1993; Crockett 1998; Reader & Laland 2003: 20-21; Jones 2005), investigations which are likely to occupy laboratory and field investigators for many years. This body of research will have important implications on primate and other mammalian development, energetics, life history evolution, and conservation, as it involves an understanding of growth, survival, and reproduction relative to environmental regimes.

References

Alberts SC, Altmann J (2003) Matrix models for primate life history analysis. In PM Kappeler, ME Pereira (eds.), Primate life histories and socioecology. University of Chicago Press, pp 66-102.

Crockett CM (1998) Conservation biology of the genus Alouatta. Int. J. Primatol. 19: 549-578.

Jones CB (2005) Behavioral flexibility in primates: causes and consequences. Springer, New York.

Meyers LA, Bull JJ (2002) Fighting change with change: adaptive variation in an uncertain world. Trends Ecol Evol 17: 551-557.

Milton K (1998) Physiological ecology of howlers (Alouatta): energetic and digestic considerations and comparison with the Colobinae. Int J Primatol 19: 513-548.

Ravosa MJ, Meyers DM, Glander KE (1993) Relative growth of the limbs and trunk in sifakas: heterochronic, ecological, and functional considerations. Am J Phys Anthropol 92: 499-520.

Reader SM, Laland KN (2003) Animal innovation: an introduction. In SA Reader and KN Laland (eds.), Animal innovation, Oxford University Press, Oxford, pp 3-35.

Stearns SC, Pereira ME, Kappeler PM (2003) Primate life histories and future research. In PM Kappeler, ME Pereira (eds.), Primate life histories and socioecology. University of Chicago Press, pp 301-312.

Strier KB (1992) Ateline adaptations: behavioral strategies and ecological constraints. Am J Phys Anthropol 88: 515-524.

Abstract: Life history patterns of howler monkeys in a time-varying environment. CB Jones

Jones CB (1997) Life-history patterns of howler monkeys in a time-varying environment. Biol. Primatol. Lat. 6(1): 1-8.

Abstract: This report examines the relationship between life-history characteristics and environmental predictability for mantled howler monkeys (Alouatta palliata palliata Gray) at Hacienda La Paccifica, Guanacaste Province, Costa Rica. A census with age structure was employed to estimate life-history parameters [calculations of life table after Wilson & Bossert, 1971] including survivorship, fecundity, and mortality, [& generation time]. A time-series analysis of yearly rainfall at La Pacifica was conducted to test inferences from life-history theory whereby variations in mortality across the lifespan [across age stages] are a function of environmental predictability. La Pacifica was found to be a relatively predictable environment, and, consistent with theory, howlers exhibit life-history traits expected for their regime. These include low survivorship during more than one age class, iteroparity, a relatively small reproductive effort, a single young per litter, relatively few young across a lifetime, and relatively long lifespan. The predictable environment of howlers at La Pacifica appears to favor adult over juvenile (including infant) survival, and howler life history is consistent with that for other large mammalian herbivores whose females may time reproductive investment to reduce the [deleterious] effects of environmental heterogeneity ("bet-hedging"). [A moving average model of the rainfall data is provided in the paper.]

Reference
Wilson EO, Bossert WH (1971) A primer of population biology. Sinauer Associates, Stamford, CT.