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Parental Investment “any characteristics or actions of parents that increase the fitness of offspring at a cost…to the parent’s fitness” Clutton-Brock 1991
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Territory Bequeathal Mother gives part or all of her territory to her offspring stops defending territory becomes vagrant shows up on vacant middens offspring take over midden
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Why Bequeath? Parental Investment? Alternatives: Improve territory quality Parent-Offspring conflict
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Longterm Evidence 9 years (89-97) 2835 tagged individuals 1013 litters 590 litters with young to weaning Post-breeding behaviour for 485 litters (302 females) Analyses by Dominique Berteaux
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Post-breeding Options Keep Share Bequeath Increasing investment
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Keep % Proportion using each behavioural strategy ShareBequeath n = 214 n = 71 n = 200
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% survivorship Owned another territory Did not own any territory Owned their mother’s territory Effect of territory ownership on juvenile overwinter survival n = 186 n = 288 n = 206
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Costs/Benefits to Females Survive70.46957.7 Reproduce8079.680.5 Litter size2.73 1.1 2.87 1.3 2.70 1.2 # Weaned.98 1.0 1.54 1.2 1.09 1.1 KeepShareBequeath Subsample of keep,share n=30-70
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Who Bequeaths? Can this be predicted by parental investment theory?
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Factors affecting whether females bequeathed or not Age NoYes Cone production NoYes # of juveniles NoYes Cone reserves NoYes
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Parental Investment Theory PredictionsRed Squirrels Increase: With ageyes With # weanedyes With foodyes In sex with >returnno
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Which Juveniles obtained middens from their mother? P<0.009 n=411
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Experimental Evidence Permanent and temporary removal of neighbours in late summer Monitor takeovers –attempts –successes Design:
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Who took over removal territories? P=0.021 Mothers with offspring
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Parental investment Pre- lactation? Do females acquire middens as a form of parental investment? Do females acquire middens as a form of parental investment?
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Experiment Experimental removal of neighbouring males in October 8 Experienced (had produced young) 8 Inexperienced (no young) Monitored fates of vacant middens
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Results No females switched territories but some acquired a second midden October X X April X X 6 of 7 Experienced 1 of 6 Inexperienced
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Results Acquired second midden61 Weaned young54 Gave midden to offspring51 Variable Exp Inexp
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Why Experienced Females? BreedersFirst-time Breeders Probability of breeding 100% 7-100% next year
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Conclusion Female red squirrels acquire middens well in advance of mating or offspring dependency and relinquish these to their offspring Anticipatory Parental Investment
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Bequeathal Unanswered Questions: Proximate cues –Availability of vacant middens –Resources on and off territory Anticipation – is it real The male-female thing Heritability of bequeathal behaviour
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