Body mass influences maternal allocation more than parity status for a long-lived cervid mother

被引:5
作者
Michel, Eric S. [1 ]
Demarais, Stephen [1 ]
Strickland, Bronson K. [1 ]
Belant, Jerrold L. [2 ]
Castle, Larry E. [3 ]
机构
[1] Mississippi State Univ, Dept Wildlife Fisheries & Aquaculture, Box 9690, Mississippi State, MS 39762 USA
[2] SUNY Coll Environm Sci & Forestry, Camp Fire Program Wildlife Conservat, 1 Forestry Dr, Syracuse, NY 13210 USA
[3] Mississippi Dept Wildlife Fisheries & Pk, Jackson, MS 39211 USA
关键词
birth mass; litter size; maternal allocation; Odocoileus virginianus; parity status; reproductive restraint hypothesis; WHITE-TAILED DEER; OPTIMAL LITTER SIZE; ODOCOILEUS-VIRGINIANUS; SEXUAL SELECTION; INCOME BREEDER; TRADE-OFFS; BIRTH-DATE; RED DEER; AGE; REPRODUCTION;
D O I
10.1093/jmammal/gyz107
中图分类号
Q95 [动物学];
学科分类号
071002 ;
摘要
Mothers should balance the risk and reward of allocating resources to offspring to optimize the reproductive value of both offspring and mother while maximizing lifetime reproductive success by producing high-quality litters. The reproductive restraint hypothesis suggests maternal allocation should peak for prime-aged mothers and be less for younger mothers such that body condition is not diminished to a level that would jeopardize their survival or future reproductive events. We assessed if reproductive tactics varied by maternal body mass and parity status in captive female white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) to determine if prime-aged mothers allocate relatively more resources to reproduction than primiparous mothers. Maternal body mass, not parity status, positively affected maternal allocation, with heavier mothers producing both heavy litters and heavy individual offspring. Conversely, maternal body mass alone did not affect litter size, rather the interaction between maternal body mass and parity status positively affected litter size such that maternal body mass displayed a greater effect on litter size for primiparous than multiparous mothers. Our results suggest that heavy white-tailed deer mothers allocate additional resources to current year reproduction, which may be an adaptation allowing mothers to produce high-quality litters and increase their annual reproductive success because survival to the next reproductive attempt is not certain.
引用
收藏
页码:1459 / 1465
页数:7
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