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201202Dec12:51

How, in the ani­mal world, inbreed­ing is avoided by pater­nal ‘voice’ recognition

Infor­ma­tion
pub­lished 02 Decem­ber 2012 | mod­i­fied 03 Decem­ber 2012
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Grey Mouse LemurPater­nal recog­ni­tion — being able to iden­tify males from your father’s line — is impor­tant for the avoid­ance of inbreed­ing, and one way that mam­mals can do this is through recog­nis­ing the calls of pater­nal kin. This was thought to occur only in large-​brained ani­mals with com­plex social groups, but a new study pub­lished Novem­ber 30 in the open access jour­nal BMC Ecol­ogy pro­vides evi­dence in a tiny, soli­tary pri­mate that chal­lenges this the­ory.

The study, led by Sharon E Kessler, finds that the grey mouse lemur
(Micro­ce­bus mur­i­nus) — a small-​brained, soli­tary for­ag­ing mam­mal only found on the island of Mada­gas­car — is able to recog­nise pater­nal rel­a­tives via vocal­i­sa­tions, thus pro­vid­ing evi­dence that this is not depen­dent upon hav­ing a large brain and a high social com­plex­ity, as pre­vi­ously suggested.

Given that more com­plex forms of social­ity with cohe­sive for­ag­ing groups are thought to have evolved from an ances­tral soli­tary for­ager much like the mouse lemur, this sug­gests that the mech­a­nisms for kin recog­ni­tion like those seen here may be the foun­da­tion from which more com­plex forms of kin-​based social­ity evolved
Sharon Kessler, lead author, Aizona State Uni­ver­sity »


Because grey mouse lemurs are noc­tur­nal solitary-​foragers liv­ing in dense forests, vocal com­mu­ni­ca­tion is impor­tant for reg­u­lat­ing social inter­ac­tions across dis­tances where vis­i­bil­ity is poor and com­mu­ni­ca­tion via smell is lim­ited. Though the mouse lemur shares sleep­ing sites with other mouse lemurs, it for­ages alone for fruit and insects. It is a par­tic­u­larly inter­est­ing species with which to study vocal pater­nal recog­ni­tion because, in the wild, females remain in the same area of birth and coop­er­a­tively raise young with other female kin. Males do not co-​nest with their mates or young and pro­vide no pater­nal care, which lim­its oppor­tu­ni­ties for familiarity-​based social inter­ac­tions. Thus, vocal­i­sa­tions are likely to be impor­tant — par­tic­u­larly for avoid­ing inbreed­ing.

The research team from Ari­zona State Uni­ver­sity and the Uni­ver­sity of Vet­eri­nary Med­i­cine Han­nover in Ger­many found that two of the most fre­quent calls of the mouse lemur were the mate adver­tise­ment call and the alarm call. Using multi-​parametric analy­ses of the call’s acoustic para­me­ters, they could see that both call types con­tained indi­vid­ual sig­na­tures. Through this, they dis­cov­ered that only male grey mouse lemur adver­tise­ment calls, but not alarm calls, con­tained acoustic pater­nal sig­na­tures. Fur­ther­more, females paid more atten­tion to adver­tise­ment calls from unre­lated males than from their fathers.

The find­ings from the study sug­gest that the dis­crim­i­na­tion between mate adver­tise­ment calls and alarm calls may be an impor­tant mech­a­nism for inbreed­ing avoid­ance. This is likely to be highly impor­tant in the grey mouse lemur species because males are likely to remain in an area for sev­eral years and they can expand their ranges to more than twice that of the female’s range, mak­ing it likely that adult males’ ranges will over­lap with those of their daugh­ters from pre­vi­ous mat­ing sea­sons.

The team also pro­posed that the mouse lemur’s ultra­sonic calls above the hear­ing range of owls could be an anti-​predator strat­egy, espe­cially since the species suf­fers from high pre­da­tion.

Sharon Kessler says, “Future analy­ses will deter­mine which acoustic para­me­ters make this kin recog­ni­tion pos­si­ble by arti­fi­cially manip­u­lat­ing acoustic para­me­ters in the calls and then using the mod­i­fied calls in play­back exper­i­ments.”



(Source: Bio­Med Cen­tral press release, 30.11.2012)

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