Data from: Patterns of age-related change in reproductive effort differ in the pre-natal and post-natal periods in a long-lived mammal
Age-related changes in maternal reproductive allocation for long-lived species are a key prediction from life-history theory. Theoretical and empirical work suggests that allocation may increase with age due to constraint (increases with experience) or restraint (increases with age in the face of de...
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Zusammenfassung: | Age-related changes in maternal reproductive allocation for long-lived
species are a key prediction from life-history theory. Theoretical and
empirical work suggests that allocation may increase with age due to
constraint (increases with experience) or restraint (increases with age in
the face of declining residual reproductive value), and may decrease among
the oldest aged animals due to senescence in reproductive function. Here,
we use a hierarchical modelling approach to investigate the age-related
patterns of change in maternal reproductive effort in the Weddell seal, a
long-lived marine mammal with a protracted period of maternal care during
which mothers allocate a large proportion of body mass while feeding
little. We find that maternal allocation increases with age for young
mothers during both the pre-natal and post-natal periods. In contrast,
older mothers demonstrate a senescent decline in pre-natal allocation but
allocate more of their declining resources to their offspring during the
post-natal period. We also find strong evidence for the importance of
individual effects in reproductive allocation among mothers: some mothers
consistently produce heavier (or lighter) pups than expected. Our results
indicate that maternal allocation changes over a mother's
reproductive life span and that age-specific differences differ in notable
ways in pre-natal and post-natal periods. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.tk5ph |