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Reproductive behaviours in a risky world: are mothers trading-off offspring safety for future fitness?

Subject Area Sensory and Behavioural Biology
Term from 2015 to 2023
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 284056073
 
Final Report Year 2024

Final Report Abstract

Individuals do not only have to eat without been eaten, they also have to balance the risk of mortality for themselves and their offspring, with their investment into reproduction. Female mammals invest time and energy in gestation, lactation and parenting. They also have to protect their offspring against predation and infanticide by conspecifics, often by unrelated males. We studied reproductive trade offs for female mammals under infanticide risk, using small rodents which invest heavily into reproduction, often balancing current and future reproduction by simultaneous pregnancy and lactation, facing constant risks of predation for themselves and their offspring and the additional risk of infanticide by conspecific males. We found that rodent females are able to flexibly allocated time spent between searching for a mate and protecting their nest, which was modulated by their familiarity with a potential intruder and the value of the reproductive investiment, i.e. the size of litter and its age.

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