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Journal ArticleDOI

The erect "penis" is a flag of submission in a female-dominated society: Greetings in the Serengeti spotted hyaenas

TLDR
A new scenario is sketched that links (1) initial virilization to the occurrence of neonatal siblicide amongst members of a twin litter, and (2) costs of maintenance, ‘pseudo-penile’ control over copulation and male submission, and suggests new hypotheses to account for hitherto unexplained features.
Abstract
In East Africa, spotted hyenas live in large clans in a highly structured society dominated by females. A clan is a fission-fusion society where members are often solitary or in small groups. Spotted hyenas have a ritualized greeting during which two individuals stand parallel and face in opposite directions. Both individuals usually lift their hind leg and sniff or lick the anogenital region of the other. The unique aspect of greetings between individuals is the prominent role of the erect ‘penis’ in animals of both sex. Female spotted hyenas have fused outer labiae and a ‘pseudo-penis’ formed by the clitoris which closely resembles the male penis and can be erected. During greetings subordinates signalled submission with gestures which were not necessarily reciprocated by the dominant participant. Asymmetries were most pronounced in greetings between adult females where the probability of asymmetries increased with the divergence in rank between partners. Greetings between adult females and males were uncommon and restricted to males above median rank, principally the alpha male. Models of primate affiliative behavior assume that benefits derived from social relationships with different individuals are not equal and that individuals are selected to maximize the benefits they receive from social relationships with others. The observed distribution of greetings between partners of different rank matched the predictions of these models. An examination of non-adaptive hypotheses on the evolution of the ‘pseudo-penis’ demonstrated that the conventional scenario linking (initial) virilization of female genitalia with selection for female dominance does not explain either the initial virilization, nor the evolution of the ‘pseudo-penis’ to its current form and use. We sketch a new scenario that links (1) initial virilization to the occurrence of neonatal siblicide amongst members of a twin litter, and (2) costs of maintenance, ‘pseudo-penile’ control over copulation and male submission. Our analysis confirms previous adaptive hypotheses on the function of the ‘pseudo-penis’ in greetings and suggests new hypotheses to account for hitherto unexplained features.

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Citations
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Book ChapterDOI

Evolution and the Theory of Games

TL;DR: In the Hamadryas baboon, males are substantially larger than females, and a troop of baboons is subdivided into a number of ‘one-male groups’, consisting of one adult male and one or more females with their young.
Journal ArticleDOI

Adaptation, Exaptation, and Constraint: A Hormonal Perspective.

TL;DR: Conceptual issues in evolutionary biology from an endocrinological perspective are approached, noting that single hormones typically act on several target tissues and thereby mediate suites of correlated phenotypic traits.
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Allostatic load, social status and stress hormones: the costs of social status matter

TL;DR: This work reports the first model that consistently explains rank differences in glucocorticoid concentrations of different species and sexes, and suggests that the relative allostatic load of social status predicts whether dominants or subordinates express higher or lower concentrations of glucOCorticoids.
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Conflict resolution following aggression in gregarious animals: a predictive framework

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a framework in which the costs and benefits of friendly postconflict reunions, both for each individual opponent and for their mutual relationship, are used to predict the patterning of post-conflict resolution mechanisms in other gregarious animals.
Book ChapterDOI

Sex ratios in birds and mammals: can the hypotheses be disentangled?

TL;DR: In this paper, a number of hypotheses contribute to our understanding of why birds and mammals might alter the sex ratio of their young, and profitable approaches to untangle this complexity are reviewed.
References
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Book

Evolution and the Theory of Games

TL;DR: A modification of the theory of games, a branch of mathematics first formulated by Von Neumann and Morgenstern in 1944 for the analysis of human conflicts, was proposed in this paper.

The spandrels of San Marco and the Panglossian paradigm: a critique of the adaptationist programme

TL;DR: The adaptationist programme is faulted for its failure to distinguish current utility from reasons for origin, and Darwin’s own pluralistic approach to identifying the agents of evolutionary change is supported.
Journal ArticleDOI

The spandrels of San Marco and the Panglossian paradigm: a critique of the adaptationist programme

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors criticise the adaptationist program for its inability to distinguish current utility from reasons for origin (male tyrannosaurs may have used their diminutive front legs to titillate female partners, but this will not explain why they got so small).
Journal ArticleDOI

Exaptation; a missing term in the science of form

TL;DR: This work presents several examples of exaptation, indicating where a failure to concep- tualize such an idea limited the range of hypotheses previously available, and proposes a terminological solution to the problem of preadaptation.
Book ChapterDOI

Evolution and the Theory of Games

TL;DR: In the Hamadryas baboon, males are substantially larger than females, and a troop of baboons is subdivided into a number of ‘one-male groups’, consisting of one adult male and one or more females with their young.