Authors
Bailey, K. L., Jonesteller, T., Kovacs-Balint, Z. A., Bachevalier, J., Alvarado, M. C., Wilson, M. E., Raper, J., Sanchez, M. M.
Abstract
This study examined the long-term effects of low social status on reproductive success and seasonal changes in reproductive and stress hormones of adult female rhesus macaques. Rhesus are a matriarchal, matrilineal species that form hierarchical social hierarchies maintained by aggression. Thus, animals in the bottom of the hierarchy (low social status: subordinate) experience high levels of aggression from those in higher social ranks and therefore must remain vigilant. Social subordination generates chronic psychosocial stress and could negatively impact reproductive function. Twenty-seven adult female rhesus monkeys (13 dominant -DOM-, 14 subordinate -SUB-; 8-11 years old) were studied for stress neuroendocrine function -measuring basal plasma levels of cortisol-, as well as for reproductive endocrine function -measuring basal levels of estradiol (E2). In addition, we examined the reproductive success rates of these females (defined as number of live births/years with male access), their success rates raising infants that survived to 1 year, and the characteristics and effectiveness of their maternal care. Our findings show significantly lower reproductive success rates in SUB than DOM females, blunted E2 seasonal changes, driven by higher E2 levels in the anovulatory season and more attentive maternal care of offspring early in life than dominant females. Age at first birth was negatively associated with infant survival rate across ranks. Interestingly, higher levels of reproductive hormones (E2) during the anovulatory season predicted lower reproductive success, although the effect was driven by animals lactating at that point. Overall, these findings suggest that subordinate female macaques show a phenotype consistent with impaired reproductive function.
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bioRxiv
The authors list and abstract were imported from bioRxiv on 04 Nov 2025.
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