| Literature DB >> 27272352 |
Rebecca J Snyder1,2, Bonnie M Perdue3, Zhihe Zhang4, Terry L Maple5, Benjamin D Charlton6.
Abstract
The body condition constraint and the experience condition constraint hypotheses have both been proposed to account for differences in reproductive success between multiparous (experienced) and primiparous (first-time) mothers. However, because primiparous mothers are typically characterized by both inferior body condition and lack of experience when compared to multiparous mothers, interpreting experience related differences in maternal care as support for either the body condition constraint hypothesis or the experience constraint hypothesis is extremely difficult. Here, we examined maternal behaviour in captive giant pandas, allowing us to simultaneously control for body condition and provide a rigorous test of the experience constraint hypothesis in this endangered animal. We found that multiparous mothers spent more time engaged in key maternal behaviours (nursing, grooming, and holding cubs) and had significantly less vocal cubs than primiparous mothers. This study provides the first evidence supporting the experience constraint hypothesis in the order Carnivora, and may have utility for captive breeding programs in which it is important to monitor the welfare of this species' highly altricial cubs, whose survival is almost entirely dependent on receiving adequate maternal care during the first few weeks of life.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27272352 PMCID: PMC4895145 DOI: 10.1038/srep27509
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Estimated marginal means ± s.e. generated by GLMMs fitted with a Poisson probability distribution for experienced and inexperienced captive giant panda mothers for nursing behaviour (a) cub grooming (b) holding the cub (c) other maternal behaviour (d) cub vocal behaviour (e) and licking the cub’s anogenital area (f), *p < 0.05.
Information about the identity, year data were collected, birth history, mean body weight, litter size, captive location, and hours of data collected on the giant panda mothers included in the study.
| BingBing | 2000 | Multiparous | 90 | twins | CRBGPB | 75.5 |
| ChengCheng | 1998 | Multiparous | 97 | single | CRBGPB | 68.5 |
| 2000 | Multiparous | 100 | twins | CRBGPB | 61 | |
| ChengJi | 2007 | Primiparous | 99 | twins | CRBGPB | 75.5 |
| ErYatou | 2007 | Multiparous | 93 | twins | CRBGPB | 72 |
| LunLun | 2006 | Primiparous | 103.5 | single | Zoo Atlanta | 101 |
| 2008 | Multiparous | 99.4 | single | Zoo Atlanta | 77.5 | |
| MeiMei | 1999 | Primiparous | 110 | twins | CRBGPB | 82 |
| QingQing | 2000 | Multiparous | 86 | single | Chengdu Zoo | 78.5 |
| 2001 | Multiparous | 85 | twins | CRBGPB | 68 | |
| YaYa | 1997 | Primiparous | 105 | single | CRBGPB | 73 |
| 1999 | Multiparous | 107 | twins | 94 | ||
| 2001 | Multiparous | 107 | twins | CRBGPB | 75.5 | |
Descriptions of the behavioural measures that were recorded for captive giant panda mother-cub dyads in this study.
| Grooming cub | Mother licks any part of cub’s body, other than the anogenital area, and/or bites the cub lightly and repetitively, using incisors, anywhere on its body. |
| Nursing cub | Mother is alert or relaxed while cub suckles from nipples. This behaviour takes precedence over all other behaviours (e.g., licking cub anogenital). |
| Lick cub anogenital | Mother licks the cub’s anogenital area. |
| Holding cub | Mother uses any part of her body (paw, mouth, foreleg) to hold/support the cub on her body. At least 50% of the cub’s body must be supported on some part of the mother’s body. |
| Other maternal | Mother performs any other behaviour involving the cub that is not described above (e.g., olfactory investigation of cub, repositioning cub). |
| Cub vocal | Cub makes any type of vocalisation. May range from low-pitched throaty sound to high-pitched open-mouthed call. |