Publication | Closed Access
The intrinsic rate of natural increase and reproductive effort in primates
107
Citations
20
References
1988
Year
PrimatologyBreeding BehaviorFertilityFitnessNatural SelectionReproductive BiologyLocomotor PerformanceBody CompositionPrimate BehaviorPublic HealthReproductive EffortHealth SciencesReproductive SuccessBehavioral SciencesLife HistoryBasal Metabolic RateIntrinsic RateR MaxNatural IncreaseBiologyBody SizeEvolutionary BiologyPhysiologyAnimal BehaviorComparative Physiology
The intrinsic rate of natural increase (r max ) is calculated for 58 primate species. It is found that this parameter is negatively correlated with body weight, so that larger primate species consistently have a lower r max than do smaller species. Although there is no apparent link between the raw value of r max and environmental predictability, a relationship between a high r max , relative to body weight, and an unpredictable environment is found to exist. However, there is no relationship between a predictable environment and either the raw value of r max , or the relative r max . After body size effects are removed, r max is not correlated with basal metabolic rate (BMR). Pre‐natal maternal investment (MI) is found to correlate highly with BMR, even after the removal of body weight effects. MI does not correlate either with r max or with environmental predictability. Diet appears to have little influence either on r max on MI, but there is some indication that folivores have both a high relative r max and a high relative MI. These results are discussed in the light of theories of life‐history strategy evolution.
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