Literature DB >> 33710647

Migration distance and maternal resource allocation determine timing of birth in a large herbivore.

Ellen O Aikens1,2, Samantha P H Dwinnell3, Tayler N LaSharr1,3,4, Rhiannon P Jakopak1,3,4, Gary L Fralick5, Jill Randall6, Rusty Kaiser7, Mark Thonhoff8, Matthew J Kauffman9, Kevin L Monteith1,3.   

Abstract

Birth timing is a key life-history characteristic that influences fitness and population performance. For migratory animals, however, appropriately timing birth on one seasonal range may be constrained by events occurring during other parts of the migratory cycle. We investigated how the use of capital and income resources may facilitate flexibility in reproductive phenology of migratory mule deer in western Wyoming, USA, over a 5-yr period (2015-2019). Specifically, we examined how seasonal interactions affected three interrelated life-history characteristics: fetal development, birth mass, and birth timing. Females in good nutritional condition at the onset of winter and those that migrated short distances had more developed fetuses (measured as fetal eye diameter in March). Variation in parturition date was explained largely by fetal development; however, there were up to 16 d of plasticity in expected birth date. Plasticity in expected birth date was shaped by income resources in the form of exposure to spring green-up. Although individuals that experienced greater exposure to spring green-up were able to advance expected birth date, being born early or late with respect to fetal development had no effect on birth mass of offspring. Furthermore, we investigated the trade-offs migrating mule deer face by evaluating support for existing theory that predicts that births should be matched to local peaks in resource availability at the birth site. In contrast to this prediction, only long-distance migrants that paced migration with the flush of spring green-up, giving birth shortly after ending migration, were able to match birth with spring green-up. Shorter-distance migrants completed migration sooner and gave birth earlier, seemingly trading off more time for offspring to grow and develop over greater access to resources. Thus, movement tactic had profound downstream effects on birth timing. These findings highlight a need to reconsider classical theory on optimal birth timing, which has focused solely on conditions at the birth site.
© 2021 The Authors. Ecology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Ecological Society of America.

Entities:  

Keywords:  zzm321990Odocoileus hemionuszzm321990; birth timing; capital-income breeding spectrum; carry-over effects; full annual cycle ecology; green-wave surfing; migration; mule deer; seasonal interactions

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 33710647     DOI: 10.1002/ecy.3334

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ecology        ISSN: 0012-9658            Impact factor:   5.499


  2 in total

1.  Industrial energy development decouples ungulate migration from the green wave.

Authors:  Ellen O Aikens; Teal B Wyckoff; Hall Sawyer; Matthew J Kauffman
Journal:  Nat Ecol Evol       Date:  2022-10-06       Impact factor: 19.100

2.  Biomarkers of Animal Nutrition: From Seasonal to Lifetime Indicators of Environmental Conditions.

Authors:  Rachel A Smiley; Tayler N LaSharr; Heather N Abernathy; Yasaman N Shakeri; Rebecca L Levine; Seth T Rankins; Rhiannon P Jakopak; Rebekah T Rafferty; Jaron T Kolek; Brittany L Wagler; Samantha P H Dwinnell; Timothy J Robinson; Jill E Randall; Rusty C Kaiser; Mark Thonhoff; Brandon Scurlock; Troy Fieseler; Gary L Fralick; Kevin L Monteith
Journal:  Life (Basel)       Date:  2022-03-04
  2 in total

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