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Female reproductive parameters and fruit availability: factors determining onset of estrus in Japanese macaques
Author(s) -
Takahashi Hiroyuki
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
american journal of primatology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.988
H-Index - 81
eISSN - 1098-2345
pISSN - 0275-2565
DOI - 10.1002/ajp.10041
Subject(s) - estrous cycle , biology , mating , seasonal breeder , zoology
This study examined the onset of estrus, nutritional conditions during the mating season, and female reproductive parameters in a troop of unprovisioned Japanese macaques ( Macaca fuscata fuscata ). The mean interbirth interval (IBI) was 25.1 mo, suggesting a 2‐yr birth cycle. The mean IBI following the death of an infant before the mating season was only 19.8 mo, whereas the mean IBI was 27.8 mo when the infant survived. Estrus occurred during the time of the greatest food quality, in the autumn (i.e., mating season). A female whose infant did not survive the mating season tended to come into estrus more readily than one with a surviving infant. Only one of the 19 females whose infants survived came into estrus, whereas 43 of the 58 (74.1%) females whose infants did not survive came into estrus. Fruit conditions during the mating season each year were evaluated by the seed crop of the two species ( Fagus crenata and Zelkova serrata ) that constituted the main food source for the macaques; fruiting levels were classified as “high‐fruit” or “low‐fruit.” Females came into estrus more often during high‐fruit mating seasons than during low‐fruit mating seasons: 36 (97.3%) of 37 females came into estrus during high‐fruit mating seasons, whereas eight (20%) of 40 females came into estrus during low‐fruit mating seasons. Although females came into estrus under both high‐ and low‐fruit conditions during the mating season, estrus seldom occurred when females had a surviving infant, and it appears that the absence of a surviving infant is an almost essential variable for the onset of estrus. When females with a surviving infant were excluded from the analysis because they were unlikely to come into estrus, all 35 remaining females (100%) came into estrus during high‐fruit mating seasons, whereas only eight (34.8%) of 23 females came into estrus during low‐fruit mating seasons. Therefore, the onset of estrus is strongly affected not only by the survival of infants through the mating season, but also by fruiting conditions, especially the availability of high‐quality food. © 2002 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.

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