Abstract

Among wild Japanese macaques, which have clear reproductive seasonality, correspondence between fruit-food production in the mating season and birth rate in the following year was confirmed in two different habitats. One of the study areas was evergreen broad leaved forest on Yakushima Island, for which demographic and fruiting data for seven years were used. The other was a deciduous-coniferous mixed forest on Kinkazan Island in the cool temperate zone, for which 11 years of data were used. From the fruit-crop data, each year was classified as a good or bad fruiting year for each population. At both habitats, female macaques had fewer babies after bad fruiting years than after good fruiting years. In Yakushima, small troops had a lower birth rate than large troops and this tendency was clear after bad fruiting but not after good fruiting. On the other hand, in Kinkazan such differences due to troop size were not found. These findings were consistent with the observation that intertroop encounters occur more often and are more agonistic in Yakushima than in Kinkazan and large troops tend to be dominant to small troops in the Yakushima population. Thus annual fluctuations in fruit production appear to increase the difference in birth rates between troops of different sizes through intertroop competition in Yakushima, but not in Kinkazan.

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