# Beyond the Alpha: Extra‐Pair Paternities and Male Reproductive Success in a Primate Multilevel Society

**Authors:** Fan Wu, Jia Liu, Derek W. Dunn, Yixin Shang, Shiyu Jin, Huihui Du, Yuanchun Wu, Yiyi Men, Guoliang Chen, Gang He, Baoguo Li, Songtao Guo

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/ece3.71749 · Ecology and Evolution · 2025-07-07

## TL;DR

This study explores how male golden snub-nosed monkeys achieve long-term reproductive success through social status and mating strategies, including extra-pair paternities.

## Contribution

The study uses longitudinal data to show how male rank and tenure length influence reproductive success in a complex primate society.

## Key findings

- Tenure length is a stronger determinant of long-term reproductive success than rank through both within-unit and extra-unit paternities.
- Females may gain direct and indirect benefits from extra-pair paternities by reducing infanticide risk and accessing better resources.
- Extra-pair paternity is a key strategy for optimizing reproductive success in this primate species.

## Abstract

In social mammals, dominance status and tenure length are often important determinants of male reproductive success. Nevertheless, alternative strategies, such as extra‐pair mating, and the active role of females in securing reproductive benefits can substantially modify patterns of paternity. To date, many studies have had short observation periods and small sample sizes, constraining understanding of how male social status, tenure length, and female mating strategies jointly affect male long‐term reproductive success, especially in species with complex social systems. Using longitudinal demographic and genetic data from a free‐ranging population of a golden snub‐nosed monkey (
Rhinopithecus roxellana
) multilevel society in the Qinling Mountains, central China, we investigated how leader males' ranks and tenure lengths influence their reproductive success through within‐unit and extra‐unit paternities. We found that although high rank increases the likelihood of producing within‐unit paternity offspring in the short term, tenure length is a stronger determinant of long‐term reproductive success via both within‐unit and extra‐unit paternities. Females may gain direct benefits from producing extra‐pair paternity offspring by reducing the risk of infanticide through mating with all‐male band males and/or by selecting high‐ranking leader males for better access to resources. Moreover, females may also accrue additional indirect benefits from producing extra‐pair paternity offspring when more adult males are available in the breeding band. Our findings highlight extra‐pair paternity as a reproductive strategy for both male and female golden snub‐nosed monkeys to optimize reproductive success, which may also play a role in maintaining stability in this complex primate society.

This paper is the latest study to explore the effects of social status and reproductive strategy intake on the males' long‐term reproductive success in a multilevel society using longitudinal demographic and genetic data. The findings of this study further expand the significance of extra‐pair paternity as a reproductive strategy, revealing how social species balance intersexual conflict in comparative studies of reproductive success.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Rhinopithecus roxellana (taxon 61622)

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Rhinopithecus roxellana (golden snub-nosed monkey, species) [taxon 61622]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

131 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12234392/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12234392