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Abstract
Judicious management of energy can be invaluable for
animal survival and reproductive success. Capital breeding mammals
typically transfer energy to their young at extremely high rates while
undergoing prolonged fasting, making lactation a tremendously energy
demanding period. Effective management of the competing demands of the
mother's energy needs and those of her offspring is presumably
fundamental to maximizing lifetime reproductive success.How does the mother maximize her chances of
successfully rearing her pup, by ensuring that both her pup and herself
have sufficient energy during this ‘energetic fast’? While energy
management models were first discussed in the 1990s, application of this
analytical technique is still very much in its infancy. Recent work
suggests that a broad range of species exhibits ‘energy compensation’;
during periods when they expend more energy on activity, their bodies
partially compensate by reducing background (basal) metabolic rate as an
adaptation to limit overall energy expenditure. However, the value of
energy management models in understanding animal ecology is presently
unclear.We investigate whether energy management models
provide insights into the breeding strategy of phocid seals. Not only do
we expect lactating seals to display energy compensation because of
their breeding strategy of high energy transfer while fasting, but we
anticipate that mothers exhibiting a lack of energy compensation are
less likely to rear offspring successfully.On the Isle of May in Scotland, we collected heart
rate data as a proxy for energy expenditure in 52 known individual grey
seal (Halichoerus grypus) mothers, repeatedly across 3 years of
breeding. We provide evidence that grey seal mothers typically exhibit
energy compensation during lactation by downregulating their background
metabolic rate to limit daily energy expenditure during periods when
other energy costs are relatively high. However, individuals that fail
to energy compensate during the lactation period are more likely to end
lactation earlier than expected.
Our study is the first to demonstrate the importance
of energy compensation to an animal's reproductive expenditure.
Moreover, our multi‐seasonal data indicate that environmental stressors
may reduce the capacity of some individuals to follow the energy
compensation strategy.
Original language | English |
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Number of pages | 12 |
Journal | Journal of Animal Ecology |
Volume | Early View |
Early online date | 7 Sept 2020 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | E-pub ahead of print - 7 Sept 2020 |
Keywords
- Capital breeding
- Energy management
- Grey seal
- Lactation
- Reproductive success
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