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M. Gomendio J. Cassinello P. Bateson M. W. Smith 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》1995,37(2):71-80
Two treatments of hooded rat (Rattus norvegicus) mothers after the birth of their pups affected the stage of development at which their pups started to take solid food and showed an increase in the expression of sucrase, an enzyme needed for digesting solid food. The pups of mothers that became pregnant in a post-partum oestrus showed the changes significantly earlier than those in the control group (Fig. 1A, B). The pups of mothers that had been mildly food-restricted after birth showed the changes significantly later than those in the control group. In brief, the pups of the pregnant mothers weaned first, the control pups next and those of food-restricted mothers weaned last. Differences in the timing of weaning between the three groups occurred in the absence of differences in pup body weight at the time of weaning. Within each experimental group, on the day in which sucrase expression showed the first detectable increase, sucrase activity was strongly predicted by the weight of the pups shortly after birth (Fig. 3). Pregnant mothers put on weight rapidly before implantation and their pups prepared for early weaning even though they did not differ in body weight from control pups (Fig. 4A, B). Food-restricted mothers were significantly lighter than control mothers and, with lighter pups before weaning started, settled for a longer period of suckling. 相似文献
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It has been argued that female mammals should terminate expensive forms of infant care earlier as habitat quality declines.
More recently it has been shown that among a variety of mammalian species, early termination of care is also associated with
highly favourable conditions. In this paper we present data on maternal investment decisions among baboons (Papio cynocephalus ursinus) inhabiting the Drakensberg Mountains of South Africa, and compare these with data from East African baboon studies. Mothers
in the mountain habitat face a set of environmental conditions where the problem of resource allocation to offspring is expected
to be particularly acute. We begin by using the model of Altmann (1980) of maternal time budgets to demonstrate that mountain
baboon mothers experience greater perturbations to their activity budgets while suckling than do mothers in other populations.
They also provide consistently greater levels of care to their infants and do so in the absence of any form of overt conflict
over access to the nipple. Although this investment results in a relative lengthening of the interbirth interval (IBI), it
is accompanied by relatively higher infant survival. We argue that factors that influence the maternal strategy adopted by
mountain baboons include slow infant growth rates and a lack of predation in the habitat which influences probability of offspring
survival beyond the immediate postnatal period. We suggest that both “care-dependent” sources of mortality (e.g. female reproductive
condition, the amount of milk transferred to offspring) as well as “care independent” sources of mortality (e.g. predation,
infectious disease) should be considered in studies of parental investment.
Received: 26 May 1997 / Accepted after revision: 9 August 1997 相似文献
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Lactation is the most energy-intense period in the life of a female mammal. This can cause severe conflict between mother
and offspring over the duration of lactation but also between siblings over the amount of milk each pup gets from its mother.
Thus, competitive interactions between siblings are expected, and competition is likely to increase with litter size, particularly
in species where the number of offspring exceeds the number of teats. We studied sibling competition in the domestic guinea
pig (Cavia aperea f. porcellus), which has two teats, but frequently bears litters of up to five pups. By cross-fostering we created non-competition (control)
litters with two pups and competition litters with four pups and observed nursing behaviour on days 5, 10, 15 and 20 postpartum.
Pups of larger litters had lower growth rates, indicating increased competition among siblings in these litters. Pups of larger
litters had to wait longer for access to a teat and spent less time suckling than pups of smaller litters but ate more solid
food instead. Additionally, we manipulated the individual short-term need of pups by separating half of the pups of each litter
for 2 h from their mothers before observation. Within a litter, hungry pups achieved access to milk faster and spent more
time suckling than non-hungry pups. Pups competed mostly by scramble competition. Aggressive interactions occurred only in
large litters. Pups of large litters had higher cortisol levels than pups in small litters. These effects decreased with age
as pups became increasingly independent of maternal milk. Pup behaviour appears to fit better with models of scramble competition
than with those of honest signalling.
This contribution is part of the special issue “Sibling competition and cooperation in mammals” (guest editors: Robyn Hudson
and Fritz Trillmich). 相似文献
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