Abstract

Orangutans show a pronounced sexual dimorphism, with flanged males (i.e., males with fully grown secondary sexual characteristics) reaching twice the size of adult females. Furthermore, adult orangutans show sex-specific dispersal and activity patterns. This study investigates sex differences in adult foraging behavior and sheds light on how these differences develop in immatures. We analyzed 11 years of feeding data on ten adult female, seven flanged male, and 14 immature Bornean orangutans (Pongo pygmaeus wurmbii) at Tuanan in Central Kalimantan, Indonesia. We found that the diets of the adult females were significantly broader and required more processing steps before ingestion than the diets of flanged males. We also found evidence for a similar difference in overall diet repertoire sizes. For the immatures, we found that whereas females reached 100% of their mothers’ diet spectrum size by the age of weaning, males reached only around 80%. From the age of 4 years on (i.e., years before being weaned) females had significantly broader daily diets than males. We found no difference in daily or overall diet processing intensity of immature males and females but found preliminary evidence that immature males included fewer items of their mother’s diet in their own diets that were processing-intensive. Overall, our results suggest that by eating a broader variety and more complex to process food items, female orangutans go to greater lengths to achieve a balanced diet than males do. These behavioral differences are not just apparent in adult foraging behavior but also reflected in immature development from an early age on.Significance StatementIn many species, males and females have different nutritional needs and are thus expected to show sex-specific foraging behavior. Sex differences in several aspects of foraging behavior have been found in various species, but it remains largely unclear when and how those develop during ontogeny, which is especially relevant for long-lived altricial species that learn foraging skills over many years. In our study, we analyzed a cross-sectional and longitudinal data set containing more than 750,000 feeding events of adult and immature Bornean orangutans (Pongo pygmaeus wurmbii). We found that adult females had significantly broader and more complex diets than males. We also found that these differences started to develop during infancy, suggesting that immature orangutans prepare for their sex-specific foraging niches long before those become physiologically relevant while they are still in constant association with their mothers and before being frequently exposed to other role models.

Highlights

  • In many mammals, including primates, males and females lead fundamentally different lives

  • We found that the full models fitted the data better than the null models for average daily diet processing (LRT full model versus null model: Chi-square = 6.097, P = 0.014), average daily diet breadth (LRT full model versus null model: Chi-square = 5.734, P = 0.017) and relative daily diet breadth

  • The full models revealed that average daily diet processing complexity was significantly higher for adult females than for flanged males (Fig. 1a, Table 1a) that adult females had significantly broader daily diets than flanged males (Fig. 1b, Table 1b), and that adult females showed a significantly higher relative daily diet breadth than flanged males

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Summary

Introduction

In many mammals, including primates, males and females lead fundamentally different lives. Females depend on being physically able to support pregnancy and lactation which may last over multiple years (Coelho 1974; Key and Ross 1999) These essentially different patterns of energy allocation have consequences for primate physiology and behavior on many levels. Different dietary requirements have been found to be reflected in differences in foraging behavior (e.g., time spent feeding and feeding speed), diet composition , nutritional intake, and diet diversity (CluttonBrock 1977; Hiraiwa-Hasegawa 1997; O'Mara and Hickey 2012, 2014; Vogel et al 2017) These differences imply that males and females of the same species differ in the use of their foraging niche (Rose 1994; Melin et al 2010)

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