“…For example, within species, later weaning and/or longer interbirth intervals (hereafter, IBIs) have been reported in natural foraging or food limited environments compared to captive or otherwise food‐enhanced environments (e.g., table 1 in Lee, ; savanna baboons [ Papio cynocephalus ]: Altmann & Alberts, ). Maternal dominance rank and parity have also been shown to significantly influence maternal investment strategies, with low ranking and/or first time mothers weaning offspring at later ages and exhibiting longer surviving IBIs (e.g., olive baboons [ Papio anubis ]: Smuts & Nicolson, ; chimpanzees: Pusey, Williams, & Goodall, ; mountain gorillas [ Gorilla beringei ]: A. M. Robbins, Robbins, Gerald‐Steklis, & Steklis, , Eckardt et al, ; rhesus macaques [ Macaca mulatta ]: Maestripieri, ; but see Nuñez, Grote, Wechsler, Allen‐Blevins, & Hinde, ). In particular, primiparous mothers may face trade‐offs between investing in current offspring or completing their own somatic growth to maximize future reproduction (Charnov & Berrigan, ; Stearns, ).…”