For baboons in Kenya finding nonfamilial love in a small isolated place can be tough. A new study looks at the various ways they keep their family and romantic lives from getting too intertwined.
The wild baboons of Amboseli live in close-knit groups of 20 to 150 at the foot of Mount Kilimanjaro.
Drawing on 48 years of data on the family trees and mate choices of 1,624 wild baboons, researchers were able to better understand how baboons avoid inbreeding, but also where their barriers break down.
Because closer relatives have more similar DNA, inbreeding increases the chances that offspring will inherit two identical copies of a defective gene—the same version from each parent—and no “normal” copy to compensate for its ill effects.
Infant baboons in captivity are much more likely to die at birth if their parents were closely related. But this rarely happens in the wild, says Susan Alberts, professor of biology at Duke University, and senior author of the study in Current Biology.
Sifting through pedigree data on 607 offspring born between 1971 and 2019, Alberts and colleagues found that only six infants—1%—were born to parents who were close kin.
The researchers say that’s partly because, like in many monkeys and apes, baboon brothers and sisters go their separate ways as they grow up. While females spend their whole lives within the group where they were born, males leave their families as they reach adulthood to seek out other groups and make a life for themselves elsewhere.
That, coupled with high mortality rates for wild baboons, means that opposite-sex kin rarely overlap in adulthood, since their time together is cut short by death or dispersal, the authors report.
“The risk of inbreeding for your average baboon is pretty low,” Alberts says. “They don’t have that many opportunities.”
Even when close relatives do live together as adults, they go out of their way to avoid sexual contact.
The researchers combed through detailed records of courtships between 178 adult females and 208 males to put together a picture of baboon mating choices. For each female, they identified which males courted her during her most fertile times: following her around, grooming her, mounting her, and keeping her from the advances of other males during the days in her cycle when she was most likely to conceive.
The researchers saw from the data that baboons generally steer clear of mates that are half-siblings or closer. Genetically speaking that means any animal with whom they share 25% or more of their DNA.
But baboons proved less discriminating with their father’s side of the family than their mother’s. Mother-son dalliances were almost nonexistent, but things got murkier between fathers and daughters, even though father-daughter pairs share the same amount of DNA as mother-son pairs.
And while half-siblings from the same mother managed to avoid each other, “paternal half-siblings appear to make more mistakes,” Alberts says.
The most likely explanation, Alberts says, is that baboons simply have more familiarity with the female side of the family they’ve known since birth. It’s easier for a male baboon to recognize his maternal sisters, since they all grew up suckling the same mom, but paternal sisters are more of a mystery.
“The particularly strong bond that mothers form with their offspring give them a very reliable cue about who their relatives are,” Alberts says. “By contrast, while fathers can certainly play a big role in their offspring’s lives, the fact that this species is not monogamous means that paternity is never certain. That makes the cues of paternal kinship less reliable, more error-prone.”
The National Science Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, Princeton University, the University of Notre Dame, and Duke supported the work.
Source: Duke University