Age-specific resource investment strategies: evidence from female Richardson’s ground squirrels (Spermophilus richardsonii )
نویسندگان
چکیده
To avoid a possible cost to their future survival and/or reproduction, individuals must balance their somatic and reproductive investments. The van Noordwijk and De Jong model of resource investment predicts that investments into reproduction and soma can vary among individuals of a population based on the variation in the total amount of energy that individuals acquire. With principal components analysis (PCA), we created two axes of life history for female Richardson’s ground squirrels Spermophilus richardsonii: an index of total energy investment (PC1) and an index of investment tactic (PC2). Using these indices, we examined patterns of resource allocation to reproductive and somatic investments. Because yearling female Richardson’s ground squirrels complete growth to adult size during pregnancy and early lactation, their somatic needs exceed those of older, fully grown females. Therefore, we predicted that yearlings would show more evidence of a tradeoff between reproductive and somatic investments compared with older females. Both yearling and older females invested four to five times more mass into their litters than into their own body mass. With increasing total investment, yearling females increased investment in both reproduction and themselves, whereas older females invested relatively more in reproduction than themselves. Regardless of age, females that emerged heavier from hibernation invested fewer resources into themselves and more into their litters. Variation in total energy investment and investment tactic indices was similar for yearling and older females. Contrary to our prediction, however, yearling females showed positive associations between reproductive and somatic investments, whereas older females exhibited showed no significant association between reproductive and somatic investments.
منابع مشابه
Somatic senescence: evidence from female Richardson’s ground squirrels
We studied reproductive and somatic investments in /700 female Richardson’s ground squirrels (Spermophilus richardsonii ) of known age over a 14-year period to evaluate three hypotheses, restraint, senescence, and residual reproductive value, proposed to explain age-specific life history patterns in iteroparous vertebrates. We found that reproductive investment, measured as litter mass at first...
متن کاملExperimental Infection of Richardson’s Ground Squirrels (Spermophilus Richardsonii ) With Attenuated and Virulent Strains pf Brucella abortus
A previous investigation of the safety of Brucella abortus strain RB51 (sRB51) in various nontarget species suggested that Richardson’s ground squirrels (Spermophilus richardsonii) may develop persistent infections when orally inoculated with the vaccine. In the present study, sRB51, B. abortus strain 19 (s19), and virulent B. abortus strain 9941 (s9941) were administered orally to Richardson’s...
متن کاملCosts of Reproduction Among Rhesus Macaque Females on Cayo Santiago
Reproduction is energetically costly for mammalian females during the periods of gestation and lactation and, consequently, is likely to be associated with reduced survival (Stearns 1989, 1992 ; Roff 2002 ) , particularly when maternal condition is poor. Higher mortality may be associated with birth-related complications, but it also may be the consequence of elevated circulating levels of cort...
متن کاملSignaler and Receiver Ages Do Not Affect Responses to Richardson’s Ground Squirrel Alarm Calls
Alarm calls alert receivers to the presence and/or nature of a predatory threat. Studies of alarm communication in Richardson’s ground squirrels (Spermophilus richardsonii) have focused on juvenile signalers and receivers; however, adult and juvenile receivers may tailor their response to alarm calls based on different underlying signal parameters and attend differentially to alarm calls broadc...
متن کاملThe adaptive utility of Richardson’s ground squirrel (Spermophilus richardsonii) short-range ultrasonic alarm signals
Richardson’s ground squirrels (Spermophilus richardsonii (Sabine, 1822)) produce audible (ca. 8 kHz) and (or) ultrasonic (ca. 48 kHz) alarm vocalizations that warn conspecifics of impending danger. Audible calls have a larger active space than ultrasonic calls because they travel farther, are louder, and contain frequencies to which conspecific and allospecific recipients are more sensitive. In...
متن کامل