Abstract

Several primates show sex-based differences in activity patterns and social interactions during infancy. These differences have been associated with adult social and reproductive functions of males and females and are related to male-male competition. Our goal was to describe behavioral patterns of wild Alouatta caraya male and female infants, a species with sexual dimorphism in body size and behavioral strategies during adulthood. We also examined the relationship between life history variables, infant sex and age, activity patterns, and social interactions in order to determine whether males and females follow different trajectories during early growth. Over a 27-month study, we observed 21 male infants and 14 female infants across two similar sites in northern Argentina. Data were analyzed using generalized linear mixed model (GLMM) tests. We found no differences in suckling time or weaning age between males and females (9.7 vs. 9.4months), but male infants spent more time feeding on solid food and resting than female infants. Males also invested more time in contact with their mothers than did female infants, and mothers rejected and broke contact with males more frequently than with females. Other behavioral categories did not differ between the sexes. Our results suggest that higher nutritional demands of males compared with females may affect some behaviors. However, mothers of sons did not experience immediate trade-offs between current and future reproduction. Other behaviors, similarly expressed by the two sexes, suggest a similar developmental trajectory between male and female A. caraya infants, meaning that most differences emerge following the infant period.

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