Abstract

Studies of the relationship between sexual behavior and reproductive endocrinology in females offer critical insight into sexual selection, mate choice, and female reproductive strategies in primates. We examine the relationship between sexual solicitations and urinary estradiol in female Sichuan golden monkeys (Rhinopithecus roxellana) living under semiwild conditions at the Shanghai Wild Animal Park, China. We collected data on the frequency of sexual solicitations and urinary samples on 4 adult females during 2 mating seasons. We determined urinary estradiol levels via radioimmunoassay. Our results indicate that during the ovarian cycle, solicitation focused on the periovulatory period around the estradiol peak. The frequency of female solicitations rose to a peak after the peak of estradiol level, suggesting that ovarian steroids modulate sexual behavior during the fertile phase of the ovarian cycle. We also found that females frequently solicited matings during pregnancy, most of which the α male accepted and that resulted in copulations. During pregnancy, however, there was no obvious relationship between sexual solicitation and urinary estradiol. We conclude that in Rhinopithecus roxallana, sexual behavior and estradiol production do not strictly correlate during different parts of the reproductive cycle. We discuss additional relationships between social interactions, dominance, sexual behavior, and endocrine function.

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