It's tough at the top for alpha males—study | Global News

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It’s tough at the top for alpha males—study

/ 04:06 AM July 15, 2011

WASHINGTON—If you’re feeling envious of your boss’s paycheck, a study out Thursday shows that success comes with high stress, possibly as much as faced by those who have to struggle to find a bite to eat.

The results of nine years of research on wild baboons, published in the journal Science, suggest that despite perks like easy access to mates and food, top-ranking males experience similar stress levels as their lowest-rung counterparts.

Those in the middle showed lower stress than either the top or bottom ranking males, according to measurements of testosterone and a stress hormone known as glucocorticoid.

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“Alpha males exhibited much higher stress hormone levels than second-ranking (beta) males, suggesting that being at the top may be more costly than previously thought,” said the study led by researchers at Princeton University.

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Samples were taken from the feces of a wild male baboon population in Ambelosi, Kenya.

While the stress levels at the top and bottom were similar, they were likely caused by different problems.

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Alpha baboons spent lots of energy fighting to stay on top and trying to mate with as many females as possible, while the low-ranking males expended lots of effort searching for food.

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Meanwhile, there may be perks for not reaching quite so high.

The second-rate beta males received about the same amount of attention – in the form of grooming – from females, but did “slightly better than predicted” at reaching their “full reproductive potential,” the study said.

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TAGS: animal, Kenya, Science, success, US

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