2013
DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2012.0339
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The costs and benefits of flexibility as an expression of behavioural plasticity: a primate perspective

Abstract: Traditional neo-Darwinism ascribes geographical variation in morphology or in behaviour to varying selection on local genotypes. However, mobile and long-lived organisms cannot achieve local adaptation this way, leading to a renewed interest in plasticity. I examined geographical variation in orang-utan subsistence and social behaviour, and found this to be largely owing to behavioural plasticity, here called flexibility, both in the form of flexible individual decisions and of socially transmitted (cultural) … Show more

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Cited by 44 publications
(37 citation statements)
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References 88 publications
(114 reference statements)
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“…Holekamp et al [9] argue that, in the trade-off between brain size and bite force, the balance has been tipped in favour of the feeding apparatus. The lack of equivalent behavioural flexibility in carnivores as compared with primates, despite often striking similarities in social organization and structure (as is the case for the spotted hyaena) thus supports van Schaik's [38] suggestion that flexibility in social behaviour is ultimately limited by the degree to which brain size expansion is possible within a given lineage.…”
Section: Social Flexibility Versus Flexibility In Social Behavioursupporting
confidence: 57%
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“…Holekamp et al [9] argue that, in the trade-off between brain size and bite force, the balance has been tipped in favour of the feeding apparatus. The lack of equivalent behavioural flexibility in carnivores as compared with primates, despite often striking similarities in social organization and structure (as is the case for the spotted hyaena) thus supports van Schaik's [38] suggestion that flexibility in social behaviour is ultimately limited by the degree to which brain size expansion is possible within a given lineage.…”
Section: Social Flexibility Versus Flexibility In Social Behavioursupporting
confidence: 57%
“…Van Schaik [38] makes essentially the same argument as Schradin [34], but approaches the issue from the primate perspective, with an emphasis on brain size evolution. His argument is that flexibility in behaviour is limited by brain size, hence organisms that are small, face high predation, live in seasonal environments or lack opportunities for social learning cannot evolve greater flexibility in behaviour, as large brain size is not favoured by selection.…”
Section: Social Flexibility Versus Flexibility In Social Behaviourmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…One fundamental set of constraints is related to the genetic basis of species-specific traits that have evolved and differentiated during recursive rounds of adaptation and speciation over millennia, underpinning advantageous patterns of robustness that may turn into constraints under changing conditions (see also van Schaik [131]). The developmental trajectories of a recently fertilized oocyte of, say an insect, a fish or a mammal differ substantially from each other because of their divergent genetic make-up.…”
Section: (A) Genetic Constraintsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…are linked either to a monogamous or promiscuous mating system with their attendant behavioural consequences [132], reflecting constraints on development in existing species. Similarly, van Schaik [131] argues that species differences in brain size in orangutans are responsible for concomitant differences in behavioural flexibility. The contribution by Holekamp et al [133] suggests instead the existence of ultimately genetic constraints on the course of evolution based on their analysis of adaptations in limb and skull morphology in carnivores and primates.…”
Section: Rstbroyalsocietypublishingorg Phil Trans R Soc B 368: 2012mentioning
confidence: 99%