Berta Roura Torres

Berta Roura Torres
  • PhD Student at University of Göttingen

About

9
Publications
971
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19
Citations
Introduction
I am studying mother-offspring relationships in a wild population of mandrills, using the long-term data collected for over 10 years at the Projet Mandrillus, in Gabon. My focus is on the intergenerational effects of maternal early-life adversity (specifically the death of their mother and the birth of a close-in age younger sibling, as well as the environment) and how the maternal body condition, stress, experience and rank translates in different maternal care and style, and its impact on offs
Current institution
University of Göttingen
Current position
  • PhD Student

Publications

Publications (9)
Article
Full-text available
Mammalian species with slow life histories invest heavily in offspring care to meet offspring nutritional and developmental requirements, typically at significant costs to mothers. While maternal care has been extensively studied, understanding the mechanisms driving variation in mother‒offspring relationships during key offspring developmental per...
Article
Full-text available
In monotocous mammals, most individuals experience the birth of a younger sibling. This period may induce losses in maternal care and can be physiologically, energetically and emotionally challenging for the older sibling, yet has rarely been studied in wild primates. We used behavioural data collected from a natural population of mandrills to inve...
Article
Full-text available
Birth is a fundamental event in the life of animals, including our own species. More reports of wild non-human primate births and stillbirths are thus needed to better understand the evolutionary pressures shaping parturition behaviors in our lineage. In diurnal non-human primates, births generally occur at night, when individuals are resting. Cons...
Article
Full-text available
The Mandrillus Project is a long-term field research project in ecology and evolutionary biology, monitoring, since 2012, a natural population of mandrills (Mandrillus sphinx; primate) located in Southern Gabon. The Mandrillus Face Database was launched at the beginning of the project and now contains 29,495 photographic portraits collected on 397...
Article
Full-text available
Behavioral discrimination of kin is a key process structuring social relationships in animals. In this study, we provide evidence for discrimination towards non-kin by third-parties through a mechanism of phenotype matching. In mandrills, we recently demonstrated increased facial resemblance among paternally related juvenile and adult females indic...
Article
Full-text available
Increasing evidence indicates that sexual coercion is widespread. While some coercive strategies are conspicuous, such as forced copulation or sexual harassment, less is known about the ecology and evolution of intimidation, where repeated male aggression promotes future rather than immediate mating success with targeted females. Although known in...
Preprint
Full-text available
Behavioral discrimination of kin is a key process structuring social relationships in animals. In this study, we provide a first example of discrimination towards non-kin by third-parties through a mechanism of phenotype matching. In mandrills, we recently demonstrated increased facial resemblance among paternally-related juvenile and adult females...
Preprint
Kin discrimination is a key process structuring social relationships in animals. We show how it may be generalized to entail discrimination towards non-kin, and provide a first example of this process in a primate. In mandrills, we recently demonstrated increased facial resemblance among paternally-related females indicating adaptive opportunities...
Preprint
Full-text available
Increasing evidence indicates that sexual coercion is widespread. While some coercive strategies are conspicuous, such as forced copulation or sexual harassment, less is known about the ecology and evolution of intimidation, where repeated male aggression promotes future rather than immediate mating success with targeted females. Although known in...

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