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Title:Capital-income breeding in male ungulates : causes and consequences of strategy differences among species
Authors:ID Apollonio, Marco (Author)
ID Merli, Enrico (Author)
ID Chirichella, Roberta (Author)
ID Pokorny, Boštjan (Author)
ID Alagić, Ajša (Author)
ID Flajšman, Katarina (Author)
ID Stephens, Philip A. (Author)
Files:.pdf PDF - Presentation file, download (1,10 MB)
MD5: 6E766BB536BBCD1EBBF19893B4A06CD9
 
URL URL - Source URL, visit https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fevo.2020.521767/full
 
Language:English
Typology:1.01 - Original Scientific Article
Organization:Logo SciVie - Slovenian Forestry Institute
Abstract:The capital and income breeding concept links energy resources used during reproduction to the timing of their acquisition. During reproduction, capital breeders rely on resources gained previously and accumulated for reproductive investment. By contrast, income breeders use mainly resources collected during the period of reproductive activity. Most commonly, this concept is applied to females; relatively few studies have considered males. Moreover, there has been little attention to the link between the capital-income divide and other aspects of mating strategy. We studied adult males of three wild ungulates with different levels of polygyny. A large dataset (4,264 red deer, 53,619 roe deer, and 13,537 Alpine chamois, respectively) was obtained during 2007-2017 in the whole territory of Slovenia and in the Trento province, Italy. During the rut, body mass loss of males in highly polygynous species was more than twice that of weakly polygynous species: on average, red deer stags lost 19.5%; chamois bucks 16.0%; and roe deer bucks 7.5% of their body mass. This indicates potential for a hitherto unrecognized link between the degree of intrasexual competition and the degree of capital mating. The variability in body mass at the end of the rut was clearly reduced in both highly polygynous species (from 15.1 to 9.4% in red deer, and from 12.5 to 10.5% in chamois), but did not change in roe deer. Finally, roe deer bucks had recovered body mass to that of the pre-rut period by just 2 months after the rut, while red deer stags did not manage to compensate the loss of weight until the end of the year. We suggest that, at least in ungulates, there is a link between the degree of polygyny and that of capital breeding. Males of capital and income breeders underwent body mass changes resulting from different reproductive investment during the rut. Capital breeders lost considerably more weight, and invested a variable amount of energy among individuals or among years, possibly to cope with different environmental or body conditions. In so doing, they ended the rut with poorer but more even condition among individuals.
Keywords:capital-income breeding, male reproductive investment, Capreolus capreolus, Cervus elaphus, Rupicapra rupicapra
Publication status:Published
Publication version:Version of Record
Year of publishing:2020
Number of pages:12 str.
Numbering:Vol. 8, article 521767
PID:20.500.12556/DiRROS-12430 New window
UDC:630*15
ISSN on article:2296-701X
DOI:10.3389/fevo.2020.521767 New window
COBISS.SI-ID:29269251 New window
Note:Nasl. iz nasl. zaslona; Opis vira z dne 22. 9. 2020;
Publication date in DiRROS:23.09.2020
Views:1342
Downloads:806
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Record is a part of a journal

Title:Frontiers in ecology and evolution
Shortened title:Front. ecol. evol.
Publisher:Frontiers Media S.A.
ISSN:2296-701X
COBISS.SI-ID:37643053 New window

Document is financed by a project

Funder:ARRS - Slovenian Research Agency
Project number:V4-1825
Name:Divjad v naseljih, na cestah in drugih nelovnih površinah: težave, izzivi in rešitve

Funder:ARRS - Slovenian Research Agency
Project number:P4-0107
Name:Gozdna biologija, ekologija in tehnologija

Licences

License:CC BY 4.0, Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
Link:http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Description:This is the standard Creative Commons license that gives others maximum freedom to do what they want with the work as long as they credit the author.
Licensing start date:16.09.2020
Applies to:Version of Record valid from 2020-09-16

Secondary language

Language:Undetermined
Keywords:razmnoževalne strategije, zoologija, živalska sociologija, razmnoževalni vložek samcev, Capreolus capreolus, Cervus elaphus, Rupicapra rupicapra


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