When
seasonal1 changes affect food availability,
omnivores(杂食者) like blue monkeys adapt by changing their diets, but such
nutritional2 changes may impact female reproduction, according to research published November 28 in the open access journal PLOS ONE by Steffen Foerster from Barnard College, and colleagues from Columbia University and the Smithsonian Institution. The authors found that levels of fecal glucocorticoids (fGC), a stress marker, increased when female monkeys shifted their diet towards lower quality fallback foods, whereas the levels decreased when the monkeys had access to preferred foods like insects, fruits and young leaves.
They also found that
lactating(泌乳) females and those in the later stages of
pregnancy3 showed greater increases in the stress marker than females who were not in these stages of reproduction. According to the authors, their results suggest that these seasonal changes in food availability may affect inter-birth
intervals4 in these
primates5, and also affect the
timing6 of infant independence from mothers.
Foerster adds, "While it was interesting to find that even subtle changes in dietary composition may have strong effects on female reproductive decisions, it is equally noteworthy that social stress was almost
entirely7 absent from blue monkey societies. Our study makes the point that integrating behavioral,
ecological8, and
hormonal9 measures can reveal adaptive behavioral and reproductive strategies that would otherwise be difficult to discern."