Developmental changes in responsiveness to parents and unfamiliar adults in a monogamous monkey (Callicebus moloch)

Titi monkeys (Callicebus moloch) are monogamous New World primates that are characteristically found in family‐type groups consisting of a mated adult pair and one or two young. The factors maintaining the small size of these groups are not known. Based on observations of free‐ranging and captive fa...

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Published inAmerican journal of primatology Vol. 58; no. 2; pp. 71 - 89
Main Authors Mayeaux, D.J., Mason, W.A., Mendoza, S.P.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published New York Wiley Subscription Services, Inc., A Wiley Company 01.10.2002
Wiley-Liss
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Summary:Titi monkeys (Callicebus moloch) are monogamous New World primates that are characteristically found in family‐type groups consisting of a mated adult pair and one or two young. The factors maintaining the small size of these groups are not known. Based on observations of free‐ranging and captive families, parental aggression toward older offspring seems unlikely to play a significant role. Maturing individuals themselves, however, could undergo behavioral changes that weaken ties to their natal group. These might include waning of affiliative relations with parents, or subtle forms of aversion. Independent of such changes, increasing interest in unfamiliar conspecifics could be a factor. We examined these possibilities in the present study by assessing changes in social behavior and social preferences from initial ambulatory independence (6 months) through reproductive maturity (24 months) in a combined cross‐sectional/longitudinal study of 21 captive titi monkeys living with their parents. Responses to both parents and to an unfamiliar adult heterosexual pair, a single unfamiliar adult male, and a single unfamiliar adult female were observed when subjects were given a choice between parents and strangers presented simultaneously or as the only social incentive. Social stimuli were at opposite ends of a 16.8‐m‐long test corridor. Subjects could move freely about the corridor for 5 min with each configuration of social stimuli. They stayed closer to parents than to strangers at all ages. Responsiveness to strangers increased with age and suggested growing ambivalence, particularly toward the male stranger. As they approached 24 months of age, male subjects showed a dramatic increase in the frequency and intensity of agonistic behaviors toward male strangers, behaviors that were rarely directed toward female strangers or parents. Waning of attraction to parents may be less important in dispersal from the natal group than changing reactions to strangers. Am. J. Primatol. 58:71–89, 2002. © 2002 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
Bibliography:istex:2F3A913741E99EA8904D2A1EACB0151C05E1F567
National Institutes of Health - No. RR00169
University of California
ark:/67375/WNG-NQH3DZ14-X
ArticleID:AJP10050
ObjectType-Article-2
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
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ISSN:0275-2565
1098-2345
DOI:10.1002/ajp.10050