Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Acknowledgements
- To Dian Fossey
- 1 Mountain gorillas of the Virungas: a short history
- Part I The social system of gorillas
- 2 Variation in the social system of mountain gorillas: the male perspective
- 3 Female mate choice in mountain gorillas
- 4 Dispersal patterns, group structure, and reproductive parameters of eastern lowland gorillas at Kahuzi in the absence of infanticide
- 5 Subspecific variation in gorilla behavior: the influence of ecological and social factors
- Part II Within-group social behavior
- Part III Feeding behavior
- Part IV Conservation and management of mountain gorillas
- Afterword: mountain gorillas at the turn of the century
- Index
5 - Subspecific variation in gorilla behavior: the influence of ecological and social factors
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 March 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Acknowledgements
- To Dian Fossey
- 1 Mountain gorillas of the Virungas: a short history
- Part I The social system of gorillas
- 2 Variation in the social system of mountain gorillas: the male perspective
- 3 Female mate choice in mountain gorillas
- 4 Dispersal patterns, group structure, and reproductive parameters of eastern lowland gorillas at Kahuzi in the absence of infanticide
- 5 Subspecific variation in gorilla behavior: the influence of ecological and social factors
- Part II Within-group social behavior
- Part III Feeding behavior
- Part IV Conservation and management of mountain gorillas
- Afterword: mountain gorillas at the turn of the century
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Primates exhibit considerable diversity in their social systems (Smuts et al., 1987), which is thought to have evolved through an interaction of several factors including ecological variables, social factors, phylogeny, and demographic and life history variables. Attempts to understand how this variation in social organization evolves have focused primarily on (1) ecological variables, particularly predation pressure and the abundance and distribution of food (Alexander, 1974; Wrangham, 1979, 1980, 1987; van Schaik, 1983, 1989, 1996; Sterck et al., 1997), (2) social factors, primarily sexual selection and the potential risk of infanticide (Wrangham, 1979; Watts, 1989; van Schaik, 1996), and (3) phylogenetic inertia (DiFiore & Rendall, 1994). Gorillas provide a unique opportunity to reevaluate proposed models of ecological and social influences on social organization in African apes. Western lowland and mountain gorillas seem to differ dramatically in their habitats, resource availability, and foraging strategies. To what degree these differences are associated with differences in social organization is an intriguing question.
The genus Gorilla occurs in two widely separated forest habitats, one in western central Africa and one in eastern central Africa. Three subspecies of gorillas are generally recognized, western lowland (G. gorilla gorilla), eastern lowland (G. g. graueri), and mountain gorillas (G. g. beringei) (but see Doran & McNeilage, 1998 for reviewof taxonomic debate: Morell, 1994; Ruvolo et al., 1994; Butynski & Sarmiento, 1995). The three subspecies have not been studied equally. Most of our knowledge of gorilla behavior is based on the pioneering work of Dian Fossey (1974) and subsequent researchers on the well-studied mountain gorillas of Karisoke, Rwanda.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Mountain GorillasThree Decades of Research at Karisoke, pp. 123 - 150Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2001
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