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Should I stay or should I go? Hormonal and demographic correlates of natal dispersal in a population of wild vervet monkeys

Natal dispersal is an important maturational milestone in the life of many primates and is associated with changes in the physical and social environment. To integrate into an unrelated group, an individual must abandon its known environment and face various challenges which can often be costly. Mal...

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Main Author: Van Blerk, Arend R
Other Authors: O'riain, M J
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Biological Sciences 2022
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access_status_str Open Access
author Van Blerk, Arend R
author2 O'riain, M J
author_browse O'riain, M J
Van Blerk, Arend R
author_facet O'riain, M J
Van Blerk, Arend R
author_sort Van Blerk, Arend R
collection Thesis
description Natal dispersal is an important maturational milestone in the life of many primates and is associated with changes in the physical and social environment. To integrate into an unrelated group, an individual must abandon its known environment and face various challenges which can often be costly. Male dispersal is most common among Old World monkeys, but is poorly studied due to the difficulty of following dispersing individuals. Even fewer studies have attempted to explore the hormonal correlates of dispersal owing to the difficulties of obtaining sufficient faecal samples of the same individuals before, during and after a successful dispersal. In this study, I aimed to better understand the hormonal correlates (i.e. testosterone and cortisol) of dispersal in free ranging, habituated male vervets leaving their natal groups (natal dispersal). I collected faecal samples from 10 males and assessed the effects of age, rank, natal group size, adult sex ratio and number of same sex peers, to investigate potential influences on the triggers for natal male dispersal. My results show that standardised rank, but not testosterone levels, was significantly lower in the three months following a successful primary dispersal than before the animals left their natal group. Natal males from larger groups had significantly higher testosterone levels than those from smaller groups and dispersed significantly later than males from smaller groups. Cortisol levels were rarely above the minimum detection level, suggesting dispersal in vervets is not a stressful behaviour, possibly because of high levels of familiarity with individuals in troops into which males had immigrated. Limitations included the difficulty of following known individuals into habituated study troops, which resulted in a relatively small sample size of successfully dispersing males. Furthermore, a lack of adequate faecal samples at key points in the life history of individuals reduced resolution on pre- and post- dispersal hormonal correlates. Further studies will require a larger proportion of the study population to be habituated and regularly followed to allow for a more rigorous assessment of dispersal success and hormonal correlates. This study advances the limited knowledge we have on the potential drivers of male dispersal in vervets and primates more generally.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:23.204Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2022
publishDateRange 2022
publishDateSort 2022
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publisherStr Department of Biological Sciences
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/36204 Should I stay or should I go? Hormonal and demographic correlates of natal dispersal in a population of wild vervet monkeys Van Blerk, Arend R O'riain, M J Bshary, R Biological Sciences Natal dispersal is an important maturational milestone in the life of many primates and is associated with changes in the physical and social environment. To integrate into an unrelated group, an individual must abandon its known environment and face various challenges which can often be costly. Male dispersal is most common among Old World monkeys, but is poorly studied due to the difficulty of following dispersing individuals. Even fewer studies have attempted to explore the hormonal correlates of dispersal owing to the difficulties of obtaining sufficient faecal samples of the same individuals before, during and after a successful dispersal. In this study, I aimed to better understand the hormonal correlates (i.e. testosterone and cortisol) of dispersal in free ranging, habituated male vervets leaving their natal groups (natal dispersal). I collected faecal samples from 10 males and assessed the effects of age, rank, natal group size, adult sex ratio and number of same sex peers, to investigate potential influences on the triggers for natal male dispersal. My results show that standardised rank, but not testosterone levels, was significantly lower in the three months following a successful primary dispersal than before the animals left their natal group. Natal males from larger groups had significantly higher testosterone levels than those from smaller groups and dispersed significantly later than males from smaller groups. Cortisol levels were rarely above the minimum detection level, suggesting dispersal in vervets is not a stressful behaviour, possibly because of high levels of familiarity with individuals in troops into which males had immigrated. Limitations included the difficulty of following known individuals into habituated study troops, which resulted in a relatively small sample size of successfully dispersing males. Furthermore, a lack of adequate faecal samples at key points in the life history of individuals reduced resolution on pre- and post- dispersal hormonal correlates. Further studies will require a larger proportion of the study population to be habituated and regularly followed to allow for a more rigorous assessment of dispersal success and hormonal correlates. This study advances the limited knowledge we have on the potential drivers of male dispersal in vervets and primates more generally. 2022-03-22T10:54:10Z 2022-03-22T10:54:10Z 2021 2022-03-22T06:41:07Z Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/36204 eng application/pdf Department of Biological Sciences Faculty of Science
spellingShingle Biological Sciences
Van Blerk, Arend R
Should I stay or should I go? Hormonal and demographic correlates of natal dispersal in a population of wild vervet monkeys
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Should I stay or should I go? Hormonal and demographic correlates of natal dispersal in a population of wild vervet monkeys
title_full Should I stay or should I go? Hormonal and demographic correlates of natal dispersal in a population of wild vervet monkeys
title_fullStr Should I stay or should I go? Hormonal and demographic correlates of natal dispersal in a population of wild vervet monkeys
title_full_unstemmed Should I stay or should I go? Hormonal and demographic correlates of natal dispersal in a population of wild vervet monkeys
title_short Should I stay or should I go? Hormonal and demographic correlates of natal dispersal in a population of wild vervet monkeys
title_sort should i stay or should i go hormonal and demographic correlates of natal dispersal in a population of wild vervet monkeys
topic Biological Sciences
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/36204
work_keys_str_mv AT vanblerkarendr shouldistayorshouldigohormonalanddemographiccorrelatesofnataldispersalinapopulationofwildvervetmonkeys