霊長類における性間闘争の常態性を発見(A study shakes up received ideas on male domination among primates)

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2025-07-07 フランス国立科学研究センター(CNRS)

CNRSとドイツの研究機関による最新研究(PNAS掲載)で、霊長類の性間対立の過半数がオスとメスの間で発生し、性別による絶対的な優位性(勝率90%以上)は20%未満の集団に限られることが判明した。121種・253集団のデータ分析により、オス優位やメス優位のパターンは種によって大きく異なり、共通の支配モデルは存在しないことが示された。メス優位は、繁殖制御力の高さやメス同士の競争が激しい社会で見られ、一方オス優位は体格差が大きい種に多い。これらの知見は、人間社会の性役割の進化理解に新たな視点を与える。

<関連情報>

霊長類社会におけるオスとメスの支配関係の進化 The evolution of male–female dominance relations in primate societies

Elise Huchard, Peter M. Kappeler, Nikolaos Smit, +1 , and Dieter Lukas
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences  Published:July 7, 2025
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2500405122

霊長類における性間闘争の常態性を発見(A study shakes up received ideas on male domination among primates)

Significance

Males were long believed to dominate females socially in most primates. Recent studies have challenged this perspective, paving the way for a more comprehensive exploration of male–female power relations. Here, we quantify and examine variation in intersexual dominance relationships across 121 primate species. We show that societies where males win nearly all aggressive encounters against females are actually rare. Evolutionarily, females became more dominant when they gained more control over reproduction, as in monogamous, monomorphic, or arboreal species, as well as when they faced more competition, as in solitary or pair-living species. Contrarily, male-biased dominance prevails in terrestrial, sexually dimorphic, and polygynous species. These results may also deepen debates about the origins of gender roles in human societies.

Abstract

Historically, it was widely assumed that males dominate females socially in most mammals. However, recent studies revealed significant variation within and among species, opening new possibilities to explore the extent and drivers of sex biases in dominance relations. This study uses quantitative data from 253 populations across 121 primate species to investigate the distribution of, and factors associated with, sex biases in the outcome of male–female contests. We first showed that male–female contests are common (around half of all contests) and that males win >90% of these contests in less than 20% of populations. We next tested five hypotheses to explain sex biases in dominance relations. We found that female-biased dominance primarily occurs in primate societies where females have substantial reproductive control, as in monogamous, sexually monomorphic, and arboreal species. Female-biased dominance is also frequent in societies where female–female competition is intense, as in solitary or pair-living species where females are intolerant of each other, as well as in species where females face lower reproductive costs and are philopatric. Conversely, male-biased dominance is common in polygynous, dimorphic, terrestrial, and group-living species and often relies on physical superiority. In contrast, female empowerment hinges on alternative strategies, such as leveraging reproductive control. Our study highlights that male–female dominance relationships are highly variable and identifies the traits associated with the emergence of female- versus male-biased dominance in primate evolutionary history, which may also deepen our understanding of the origins of gender roles in early human societies.

生物工学一般
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