Maternal survival costs in an asocial mammal
Abstract
Maternal characteristics, social dynamics, and environmental factors can all influence reproduction and survival and shape trade-offs that might arise between these components of fitness. Short-lived mammals like the golden-mantled ground squirrel (GMGS; <i>Callospermophilus lateralis</i>) tend to maximize effort toward current reproduction at the expense of survival but may be complicated by other aspects of the species' life history and environment. Here, we use 25 years of data (1995-2020) collected from a population of GMGS at the Rocky Mountain Biological Research Laboratory in Gothic, Colorado, to test the effect of several maternal characteristics (e.g., age, experience, and timing of litter emergence), social context (e.g., litter sex ratio and kin density), and environmental context (e.g., date of bare ground and length of vegetative growing season) on survival of reproductive female GMGS using Cox proportional hazard models. Our results indicated that social dynamics (i.e., density) and environmental conditions (i.e., standardized first day of permanent snow cover and length of growing season) explained significant variation in annual maternal survival, while maternal characteristics did not. A higher density of related breeding females and the total number of females (both related and unrelated to the focal mother) were associated with an increase in the mortality hazard. A later standardized date of the first day of permanent snow cover and a shorter growing season both reduced the maternal mortality hazard. Together, our results suggest that factors extrinsic to the squirrels affect maternal survival and thus may also influence local population growth and dynamics in GMGS and other short-lived, territorial mammal species.
Local Knowledge Graph (23 entities)
Related Works
Items connected by shared entities, co-authorship, citations, or semantic similarity.
Maternal survival costs in an asocial mammal: Data and analysis
Developmental and social constraints on early reproduction in an asocial ground squirrel
Who pays? Intra- versus inter-generational costs of reproduction
Dispersal of the golden-mantled ground squirrel (Callospermophilus lateralis)
Data from: Cumulative reproductive costs on current reproduction in a wild polytocous mammal
Marmot capture history data and growing season length data
Small Mammal Survey, Acid Fen, Mt. Emmons Gunnison, Colorado
Ecosystem Disturbance and Wildlife Conservation in Western Grasslands
Management of Livestock Herbivory in Relationship to Sage-grouse Habitats and Populations
Cited By (5 times, 4 in Knowledge Hub)
Dispersal of the golden-mantled ground squirrel (Callospermophilus lateralis)
Early-life trade-offs in golden-mantled ground squirrel sociality and growth rate
Habitat Quality Affecting the Body Mass of Golden-mantled Ground Squirrels
Causes and consequences of pre-hibernation body mass in golden-mantled ground squirrels (Callospermophilus lateralis)
References (86)
8 in Knowledge Hub, 78 external
