The relationships of 42 rhesus monkey mother-infant dyads were examined to investigate the effects of the mothers' parity.
Primiparous mothers were found to be younger, more excitable and less confident than the multiparous mothers. They also received
more aggression from other adult females living in their social group and were more anxious about their infants, approaching
and leaving them more frequently. The primiparous mothers protected their daughters more than the multiparous mothers and
their daughters correspondingly spent more time in the ventro-ventral position and more time on the nipple. Their sons however
spent less time in contact with their mothers than did the sons of the multiparous mothers. Although the primiparous mothers
protected their daughters more than their sons, for the multiparous mothers the converse was true and sons received more maternal
protection. It is suggested that the greater protectiveness of the multiparous mothers towards male infants may be a consequence
of the interest siblings have in males, whereas the greater protectiveness of primiparous mothers to daughters may stem from
their greater vulnerability to attacks from adult females. The importance of mother-mediated sibling influences may explain
the lack of strong parity differences in previous studies.