Sex and friendship in baboons

Bibliographic Information

Sex and friendship in baboons

Barbara B. Smuts ; with a new preface

Harvard University Press, 1999

1st Havard University Press pbk. ed

Available at  / 4 libraries

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Note

Originally published: New York : Aldine Pub. Co., c1985

Includes bibliographical references (p. 279-293) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This work analyzes male-female relationships outside the context of mating in a troop of wild baboons. Barbara Smuts used long-term friendships between males and females, documented over a two-year period, to show how social interactions between members of friendly pairs differed from those of other troop mates, Her findings, now enhanced by 15 years of field studies, suggest that the evolution of male reproductive strategies in baboons can only be understood by considering the relationship between sex and friendship: female baboons prefer to mate with males who have previously engaged in friendly interaction with them and their offspring. Smuts suggests that female choice may promote male investment in other species, and she explores the relevance of her findings for the evolution of male-female relationships in humans.

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