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断奶时的幼崽大小会影响初产灰海豹进入繁殖群的存活率和繁殖性能。

Offspring size at weaning affects survival to recruitment and reproductive performance of primiparous gray seals.

作者信息

Bowen William D, den Heyer Cornelia E, McMillan Jim I, Iverson Sara J

机构信息

Bedford Institute of Oceanography Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, B2Y 4A2, Canada.

Department of Biology, Dalhousie University Halifax, Nova Scotia, B3H 4J1, Canada.

出版信息

Ecol Evol. 2015 Apr;5(7):1412-24. doi: 10.1002/ece3.1450. Epub 2015 Mar 4.

Abstract

Offspring size affects survival and subsequent reproduction in many organisms. However, studies of offspring size in large mammals are often limited to effects on juveniles because of the difficulty of following individuals to maturity. We used data from a long-term study of individually marked gray seals (Halichoerus grypus; Fabricius, 1791) to test the hypothesis that larger offspring have higher survival to recruitment and are larger and more successful primiparous mothers than smaller offspring. Between 1998 and 2002, 1182 newly weaned female pups were branded with unique permanent marks on Sable Island, Canada. Each year through 2012, all branded females returning to the breeding colony were identified in weekly censuses and a subset were captured and measured. Females that survived were significantly longer offspring than those not sighted, indicating size-selective mortality between weaning and recruitment. The probability of female survival to recruitment varied among cohorts and increased nonlinearly with body mass at weaning. Beyond 51.5 kg (mean population weaning mass) weaning mass did not influence the probability of survival. The probability of female survival to recruitment increased monotonically with body length at weaning. Body length at primiparity was positively related to her body length and mass at weaning. Three-day postpartum mass (proxy for birth mass) of firstborn pups was also positively related to body length of females when they were weaned. However, females that were longer or heavier when they were weaned did not wean heavier firstborn offspring.

摘要

后代大小会影响许多生物的生存及后续繁殖。然而,由于追踪大型哺乳动物个体直至成熟存在困难,关于大型哺乳动物后代大小的研究往往局限于对幼崽的影响。我们利用对个体标记的灰海豹(Halichoerus grypus;法布里修斯,1791年)进行长期研究的数据,来检验这一假设:与较小的后代相比,较大的后代在被招募时具有更高的存活率,并且作为初产母亲体型更大且更成功。1998年至2002年间,1182只刚断奶的雌性幼崽在加拿大的黑貂岛被烙上独特的永久性标记。到2012年的每年,在每周的普查中识别出所有回到繁殖群体的有标记雌性,并且捕获并测量其中一部分。存活下来的雌性比未被观察到的雌性后代体型显著更长,这表明在断奶和被招募之间存在大小选择性死亡率。雌性存活至被招募的概率在不同群组间有所不同,并且随着断奶时的体重呈非线性增加。超过51.5千克(群体平均断奶体重)后,断奶体重不再影响存活概率。雌性存活至被招募的概率随着断奶时的体长单调增加。初产时的体长与她断奶时的体长和体重呈正相关。头胎幼崽产后三天的体重(出生体重的替代指标)也与雌性断奶时的体长呈正相关。然而,断奶时体型更长或更重的雌性所产的头胎后代断奶时体重并不更重。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/a136/4395171/9690d509e26f/ece30005-1412-f1.jpg

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