Sex-biased dispersal in western lowland gorillas (Gorilla gorilla gorilla).

Melanie I Douadi, Sylvain Gatti, Florence Levrero, Gaëtan Duhamel, Magdalena Bermejo, Dominique Vallet, Nelly Menard, Eric J Petit
Author Information
  1. Melanie I Douadi: Ethologie Evolution Ecologie, UMR 6552, Université de Rennes I-CNRS, Station Biologique, 35380 Paimpont, France.

Abstract

We explored two hypotheses related to potential differences between sexes in dispersal behaviour in western lowland gorillas (Gorilla gorilla gorilla). Direct observations suggest that immature females have more opportunities to move between breeding groups than immature males. The distribution of kin dyadic relationships within and between groups does not, however, support this hypothesis. At larger geographical scales, dispersal is likely to be easier for males than females because of the solitary phase most blackbacks experience before founding their own breeding group. However, previous work indicates that males settle preferentially close to male kin. By specifically tracing female and male lineages with mitochondrial and Y-chromosomal genetic markers, we found that male gorillas in the 6000 km2 area we surveyed form a single population whereas females are restricted to the individual sites we sampled and do not freely move around this area. These differences are more correctly described as differences in dispersal distances, rather than differences in dispersal rates between sexes (both sexes emigrate from their natal group in this species). Differences in resource competition and dispersal costs between female and male gorillas are compatible with the observed pattern, but more work is needed to understand if these ultimate causes are responsible for sex-biased dispersal distances in western lowland gorillas.

MeSH Term

Animals
Behavior, Animal
DNA, Mitochondrial
Female
Genetic Variation
Gorilla gorilla
Haplotypes
Humans
Sequence Analysis, DNA
Sex Factors
Y Chromosome

Chemicals

DNA, Mitochondrial

Word Cloud

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