About this item:

563 Views | 278 Downloads

Author Notes:

Address Correpondence to Kim Wallen, Ph.D., Emory University, Department of Psychology, 532 Kilgo Circle, Atlanta. GA 30322; e-mail: kim@emory.edu.

Page Van Meter, Jessica Ganas, Nancy Megna, Anne Graff, Stephanie Allard, and Michelle Tomaszycki are thanked for assisting in the studies of pubertal females.

Contributor Information: Kim Wallen, Emory University, Julia L. Zehr, Emory University and Michigan State University.

Subject:

Research Funding:

Support for this research came from R01-MH50268 (K.W.). Independent Scientist Award K02-MH52490. NSF Graduate Fellowship (J. L. Z.), and from NCRR grant RR-00165 to the Yerkes National Primate Research Centre, which is fully accredited by the Association for Assesment and Accreditation of Laboratory Animal Care.

Hormones and History: The Evolution and Development of Primate Female Sexuality

Tools:

Journal Title:

Journal of Sex Research

Volume:

Volume 41, Number 1

Publisher:

, Pages 101-112

Type of Work:

Article | Post-print: After Peer Review

Abstract:

Sexual behavior is required for reproduction in internally fertilizing species but poses significant social and physical risks. Females in many nonprimate species have evolved physical and behavioral mechanisms restricting sexual behavior to when females are fertile. The same hormones producing female fertility also control these mechanisms, assuring that sex only occurs when reproduction is possible. In contrast to nonprimate mammals, hormones do not regulate the capacity to engage in sex in female anthropoid primates, uncoupling fertility and the physical capacity to mate. Instead, in primates, sexual motivation has become the primary coordinator between sexual behavior and fertility. This dependence upon psychological mechanisms to coordinate physiology with behavior is possibly unique to primates, including humans, and allows a variety of nonphysiological influences, particularly social context, to regulate sexual behavior. The independence between hormonal state and sexual behavior allows sex to be used for social purposes. This complex regulation of primate sexuality develops during adolescence, where female monkeys show both hormonally influenced sexual motivation and socially modulated sexual behavior. We present findings from rhesus monkeys illustrating how social context and hormonal state interact to modulate adolescent and adult sexuality. It is argued that this flexibility in sexual behavior, combined with a tight regulation of sexual motivational systems by reproductive hormones, allows sexual behavior to be used for nonreproductive purposes while still assuring its occurrence during periods of female fertility. The evolutionary pressures that produced such flexibility in sexual behavior remain puzzling, but may reflect the importance of sexuality to primate social attraction and cohesion.

Copyright information:

Rights managed by Taylor & Francis

Export to EndNote