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Marine Mammal Reproductive Structures, Strategies, & Patterns MARE 390 Dr. Turner
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Testes, One, Two Phocid – testes inguinal Otariids – testes scrotal Walrus – inguinal; scrotal during mating Pinnipeds – bacculum (penis bone) Cetaceans & Sirenians – fibroelastic penis “We're talking about S-E-X in front of the C-H-I-L-D-R-E-N." – Maude Flanders "What?!?! Sex cauldron? I thought they closed that place down“ – Krusty the Clown
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Sex Your Seal Ma’am? Teats & position of genital opening
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I’m Too Sexy for my Dolphin Distance between Anal & Genital slit ♀ both within common groove ♂ separation between; testes internal cavity
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Is that a manatee in your pocket..? Distance between Anal & Genital slit ♀ short distance ♂ separation between; testes internal cavity
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Reproduction ↑ Fitness of female = ↑ Fitness offspring Females: cost of egg, pregnancy, lactation, postnatal care Males: invest energy in competition with other males (physical & sperm)
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Reproduction Pinniped, Ursid, mustellid mating typically on land; some phocids shallow water
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Reproduction Cetaceans – belly-to-belly
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Reproduction Sirenians – belly-to-belly
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Gestation Placental mammals – 18 days to 22-24 months Marine mammals: sea otter (6-7mo) to Sperm whale (16.5mo) ↑ Gestation time = ↑ Fetus size
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Gestation Mass (kg) Gest.(mo) Int.(Y) Harbor seal11 9-121 N. Elephant 40 111 N. fur seal6 121 Walrus50 14-162-4 Porpoises8 8-11n/a Bottlenose20 12n/a Sperm Whale1050 14-163 Blue Whale2500 11-122-3
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Gestation Mass (kg) Gest.(mo) Int.(Y) Manatee30 12-132-5 Dugongn/a 143-7 Sea Otter2 6-71 Polar Bear0.7 82-4
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Delayed Implantation Delayed implantation – development of the blastocyst is slow or negligible Is obligate in pinnipeds, ursids, and mustelids Period of delayed implantation allows flexibility of timing of parturition, and is controlled by photoperiod
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Delayed Implantation Dev.Gest(mo)Delay Impl.(mo) Harbor seal 8-9.5 1.5-3 N. Elephant 74 N. fur seal84 Walrus 10-11 4-5 Sea Otter4 2-3 Polar Bear44
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Pinniped Reproduction
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Pinniped Reproductive Cycle
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Cetacean Reproductive Cycle
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Change in latitude in grey whales Migration
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Mating Systems High degree of variability in reproductive systems 2 major groups: polygyny & promiscuity Polygyny – successful male mating with several females Promiscuity – males associate with several females during a variable amount of time
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Evolution of Polygyny
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Mating Systems Driven by sexual selection – competition 1. Contest comp. – Direct comp. over ♀ 2. Endurance comp. – ♂ Endure longer 3. Scramble comp. – Search/locate ♀ 4. Mate choice comp. – Entice/attract ♀ 5. Sperm comp. - ↑ Quality/Quantity of sperm
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Pinniped Mating Systems Male otariids typically utilize Resource Defense Polygyny Characteristics: 1. Males arrive before females 2. Females receptive close to place of birth 3. Rookery substrate stable but discontinous 4. Few aggressive interactions once dominance is established
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Otariid Mating Systems Most males defend Territories – not females
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Pinniped Mating Systems Male phocids typically utilize Female (Harem) Defense Polygyny Characteristics: Most dominant male (Alpha) defends females from other subordinate males
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Phocid Mating Systems Most males defend Females – not Territories
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Phocid Mating Systems Elephant Seals – High level polygyny – alpha controls large harems
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Phocid Mating Systems Monk Seals – Low level polygyny – alpha controls individual females
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Odobenid Mating Systems Walrus – either display a Female-Defense Polygyny (like Phocids) or a Lek-like behavior (similar to Otarriids)
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Odobenid Mating Systems Lek - gathering of males, of certain animal species, for the purposes of competitive mating display
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Cetacean Mating Systems Mysticetes – little social behavior beyond mother-calf pair Many utilize sperm competition – attempt to dilute out other males sperm Odontocetes – exist in groups of variable size for persist longer than any member’s life span
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Odontocete Social Groups Arranged as schools, pods, or units Size varies by species & geographic location Mating structure a mixture of promiscuous & polygynous Male-male competition – sexual dimorphism
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Spinner Social Groups Aggregate in schools of up to 100 individuals subgroups – up to 12 Subgroups travel in echelon formation
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Orca Social Groups
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Sperm Whale Social Groups Similar to orca groups Males leave pods and form juvenile groups Solitary adult males rove among female groups
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Sirenian Mating Systems Similar to mysticetes- little social structure past mother-calf pairs Animals congregate into herds during summer months to breed Dugongs found in larger associations than manatees
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Lactation Strategies Most energetically expensive aspect of reproduction Best interest to pass as much energy as possibly even at expense of future offspring 3 strategies: Fasting, Foraging Cycle, Aquatic Nursing
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Fasting Lactation Strategy Example: Northern elephant seal Duration of fasting: All of lactation Duration of lactation: Short (4-weeks) Fat content of milk: High (55%) Pups forage during lactation: No
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Foraging Cycle Lactation Strategy Example: Antarctic fur seal Duration of fasting: Variable (few days) Duration of lactation: Intermediate (4-months) Fat content of milk: Intermediate (40%) Pups forage during lactation: No
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Aquatic Nursing Lactation Strategy Example: Walrus Duration of fasting: Short (hours-days) Duration of lactation: Long (2-3 years) Fat content of milk: Low (2-3%) Pups forage during lactation: Yes
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Lactation Length(w) Fat% Prot.% Harbor seal3.4 509 N. Elephant 4 545-12 N. fur seal18 4214 Walrus100 14-325-11 Porpoise32 4611 Bottlenose76 1412-18 Sperm Whale100 15-358-10 Blue Whale24-28 35-5011-14
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Length(w) Fat% Prot.% Manatee52 n/an/a Dugong78 n/an/a Sea Otter20-30 21-269-12 Polar Bear13017-369-13 Lactation
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Got Milk!
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