Potential for female kin associations in wild western gorillas despite female dispersal.

Brenda J Bradley, Diane M Doran-Sheehy, Linda Vigilant
Author Information
  1. Brenda J Bradley: Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 3EJ, UK. bjb37@cam.ac.uk

Abstract

Female philopatry and male dispersal are the norm for most mammals, and females that remain in their natal region often derive foraging or social benefits from proximity to female kin. However, other factors, such as constraints on group size or a shortage of potential mates, may promote female dispersal even when female kin associations would be beneficial. In these cases, female kin associations might develop, not through female philopatry, but through female emigration to the same group. To date, little attention has been focused on the potential for kin-biased behaviour between females in female-dispersing species. Here we investigate the genetic relationships among adults in eight wild groups of unhabituated western gorillas (Gorilla gorilla) at the Mondika Research Center using microsatellite genotyping of DNA collected from hair and faeces. We found that almost half (40%) of adult females had an adult female relative in the same group and average within-group relatedness among females was significantly higher than that expected under a model of random dispersal. This provides the first genetic evidence that females can maintain social associations with female relatives in spite of routine natal and secondary dispersal. In addition, we show that females appear to avoid related silverback males when making dispersal decisions, suggesting that a strategy of non-random female dispersal may also function to avoid inbreeding.

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MeSH Term

Animals
Female
Genetics, Population
Gorilla gorilla
Microsatellite Repeats
Population Dynamics
Social Behavior

Word Cloud

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