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Contradictory findings in studies of sex ratio variation in roe deer (Capreolus capreolus)
Authors:A J Mark Hewison  Reidar Andersen  Jean-Michel Gaillard  John D C Linnell  Daniel Delorme
Institution:(1) Institut de Recherche sur les Grands Mammifères Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique BP 27, F-31326 Castanet-Tolosan, France e-mail: hewison@toulouse.inra.fr Tel.: +33-5-61285123, Fax: +33-5-61735477, FR;(2) Norwegian Institute for Nature Research, Tungasletta 2 N-7005 Trondheim, Norway, NO;(3) Université Claude Bernard, Lyon 1. UMR CNRS 5558 43 boulevard du 11 novembre 1918, F-69622 Villeurbanne, France, FR;(4) Office National de la Chasse, CNERA Cervidés-Sangliers 85bis Avenue de Wagram, F-75017 Paris, France , FR
Abstract:Patterns of sex ratio variation and maternal investment reported in the literature are often inconsistent. This could be due to intra- and inter-specific variation in social systems, but may also be a result of the a posteriori nature of much of this type of analysis or the testing of models which are inappropriate. Two recent papers reported directly opposed results concerning variation in offspring sex ratios in relation to maternal condition in roe deer, interpreting the results as support for the Trivers and Willard model and for the local resource competition hypothesis, respectively. In this paper, we present data on offspring sex ratios and early juvenile body weight from two long-term studies of this species to test predictions arising from these two models concerning sex biases in litter composition and maternal care. First, we observed no consistent pattern of sex differences in an index of weaning weight or body weight at 1 month old in either population, indicating a lack of sex bias in maternal care. However, in one population, higher maternal body weight was associated with higher juvenile body weight of daughters, but not of sons. Secondly, we found a negative, but not statistically significant, relationship between maternal body weight and litter sex ratio such that heavier females tended to produce more daughters and lighter females to produce more sons. These results indicate that roe females which have additional investment potential available do not invest it in sons, as predicted by the Trivers and Willard model. Our results may provide some support that roe deer are subject to local resource competition acting at the level of the individual mother; however, the fact that particular trends in sex ratio data can be explained in functional terms provides no indication that they are actually adaptive. Received: 9 December 1997 / Accepted after revision: 11 November 1998
Keywords:Local resource competition  Maternal care  Roe deer  Sex ratio  Trivers and Willard model
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