“…Primate maternal care was long thought to be relatively independent of endocrine processes (e.g., Coe, 1990;Pryce, 1992Pryce, , 1996Maestripieri, 1999). However, recent correlational and experimental studies have implicated hormonal factors in the regulation of maternal competency and caregiving motivation in a number of primate species (e.g., humans, Homo sapiens: Fleming et al, 1997a; Japanese macaques, Macaca fuscata: Bardi et al, 2003b;pigtail macaques, M. nemestrina: Maestripieri and Zehr, 1998;rhesus macaques, M. mulatta: Holman and Goy, 1995; savannah baboons, Papio hamadryas: Bardi et al, 2004; western lowland gorillas, Gorilla gorilla gorilla: Bahr, 1995), including marmosets and tamarins (e.g., common marmosets: Pryce, 1993;Pryce et al, 1993Pryce et al, , 1995red-bellied tamarins, S. labiatus: Pryce et al, 1988;Pryce, 1993; Wied's black tufted-ear marmosets: Fite and French, 2000). There is also good reason to believe that withinfemale variation in callitrichid maternal caregiving effort corresponds to within-female variation in endocrine status.…”