For female chimpanzees, being around too many rowdy males is disadvantageous when foraging for food, an effect that can ultimately interfere with her reproductive ability, researchers found.
The findings come from an 11-year-long study of wild East African chimpanzees in Uganda, led by Melissa Emery Thompson of the University of New Mexico in the US.
Female chimpanzees have an exceedingly slow reproductive schedule, and only give birth every five to seven years.
Male chimpanzees compete quite fiercely - and in great numbers - for the attention of the rare female who might bear their offspring.
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However, all this harassment and jealous guarding by males can influence the ability of females to feed. Some females, such as those with young infants, can avoid this chaos, but only if there is high-quality food to be found elsewhere.
Thompson and her team spent more than 11 years observing the daily interactions and diets of 50 members of the Kanyawara community of East African chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes schweinfurthii) in the Kibale National Park in Uganda.
Laboratory tests gauged the levels of C-peptide (a by-product in the synthesis of insulin) and estrogen and progesterone (two ovarian steroids central to the reproductive cycle) in the urine of females.
This showed that the more males gathered around a cycling or lactating female during a given month, the lower were her C-peptide levels. In contrast, the number of females she associated with had no effect on these levels.
Declining C-peptide levels mean that the female is spending more energy than she consumes, and can result in weight loss. In the study, C-peptide levels also predicted production of ovarian steroids, indicating an effect on reproductive ability.
The study is published in Springer's journal Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology.