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Mother‐infant interactions in captive slow lorises (<i>Nycticebus coucang</i>)

54

Citations

12

References

1989

Year

Abstract

Information is presented about mother-infant interactions and infant development in a rarely studied prosimian primate, the slow loris (Nycticebus coucang). Four dyads were observed, by means of closed circuit TV, in a semi-natural environment for 1 hour per day three times a week. Infants were inactive for the first 6-8 weeks. Although mothers carried infants, they also left them alone for substantial periods of time after the 1st week. Over the 20-week study period, there was a significant decline in ventral contact but not in sitting within 12 inches or engaging in active social interactions. By the end of the study, infants were not yet fully independent. Three of the 4 were primarily responsible for maintaining physical closeness to the mother; they made most of the approaches and mothers made most of the departures. However, only 2 of the 4 infants had assumed responsibility for the initiation and maintenance of social interactions with the mother. By comparison with other nocturnal prosimians of similar size, the rate of development is relatively slow. Unlike many anthropoids, mothers were not strongly protective or rejecting. They did not bring infants back to a fixed location or try to prevent infants from leaving them; and the decline in ventral contact was not accompanied by fights between the pair. The 3 group-living mothers were more protective than the single individually housed mother, and it would seem advisable to isolate mother-infant pairs in laboratory breeding colonies.

References

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