Nutritional effects on reproductive performance of captive adult female coyotes (Canis latrans)

•Interactions between animals and their environment are fundamental to ecological research.•We examined whether nutritional manipulation prior to mating affected reproduction in adult female coyotes.•We assessed the number of implantation scars, number of pups born, sex ratios of pups, average pup w...

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Veröffentlicht in:Animal reproduction science 2016-02, Vol.165, p.69-75
Hauptverfasser: Gese, Eric M., Roberts, Beth M., Knowlton, Frederick F.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Interactions between animals and their environment are fundamental to ecological research.•We examined whether nutritional manipulation prior to mating affected reproduction in adult female coyotes.•We assessed the number of implantation scars, number of pups born, sex ratios of pups, average pup weight at birth and 2- and 6-weeks of age, and the survival rates between implantation and 2-weeks of age for two diet treatments.•We found the mean number of implantation sites and pups whelped during a reproductive cycle was influenced by food-intake prior to conception.•Understanding how environmental factors influence reproductive output may improve model predictions of coyote population dynamics. Interactions between animals and their environment are fundamental to ecological research. Field studies of coyote (Canis latrans) reproductive performance suggest mean litter size changes in response to prey abundance. However, this relationship has been assessed primarily by using carcasses collected from trappers. The objective of this study was to assess whether nutritional manipulation prior to mating affected reproduction in adult female coyotes. We examined the effects of caloric restriction during the 7 months prior to estrus on the reproductive rates of 11 captive female coyotes and the subsequent initial survival of pups through two reproductive cycles. This was a 2-year study with a cross-over design so each female was monitored for reproductive performance on each of the two diet treatments. We assessed the number of implantation scars, number of pups born, sex ratios of pups, average pup weight at birth and 2- and 6-weeks of age, and the survival rates between implantation and 2-weeks of age for two diet treatments. We found the mean number of implantation sites and pups whelped during a reproductive cycle was influenced by food-intake prior to conception. Additionally, we found evidence suggesting the effects of nutritional stress may persist for additional breeding cycles. We also provided evidence suggesting well-fed females tended to have more male pups. Understanding how environmental factors influence reproductive output may improve model predictions of coyote population dynamics.
ISSN:0378-4320
1873-2232
DOI:10.1016/j.anireprosci.2015.12.009