Adaptations to a cold climate promoted social evolution in Asian colobine primates
成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Qi, Xiao-Guang; Wu, Jinwei; Zhao, Lan; Guang, Xuanmin; Garber, Paul A.; Opie, Christopher; Yuan, Yuan; Diao, Runjie; Li, Gang; Wang, Kun; Pan, Ruliang; Ji, Weihong; Sun, Hailu; Huang, Zhi-Pang; Xu, Chunzhong; Witarto, Arief B.; Jia, Rui; Zhang, Chi; Deng, Cheng; Qiu, Qiang; Zhang, Guojie; Grueter, Cyril C.; Wu, Dongdong; Li, Baoguo
署名单位:
Northwest University Xi'an; Beijing Genomics Institute (BGI); University of Illinois System; University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign; University of Bristol; Northwestern Polytechnical University; Nanjing Normal University; Shaanxi Normal University; Massey University; Chinese Academy of Sciences; Kunming Institute of Zoology, CAS; University of Western Australia
刊物名称:
SCIENCE
ISSN/ISSBN:
0036-13312
DOI:
10.1126/science.abl8621
发表日期:
2023-06-02
页码:
927-+
关键词:
phylogenetic analysis
oxytocin
dopamine
monogamy
drive
TREE
摘要:
The biological mechanisms that underpin primate social evolution remain poorly understood. Asian colobines display a range of social organizations, which makes them good models for investigating social evolution. By integrating ecological, geological, fossil, behavioral, and genomic analyses, we found that colobine primates that inhabit colder environments tend to live in larger, more complex groups. Specifically, glacial periods during the past 6 million years promoted the selection of genes involved in cold-related energy metabolism and neurohormonal regulation. More-efficient dopamine and oxytocin pathways developed in odd-nosed monkeys, which may have favored the prolongation of maternal care and lactation, increasing infant survival in cold environments. These adaptive changes appear to have strengthened interindividual affiliation, increased male-male tolerance, and facilitated the stepwise aggregation from independent one-male groups to large multilevel societies.