INFLUENCE OF THE NATAL ENVIRONMENT ON DISPERSAL OF WHITE-FOOTED MICE

Citation
Jj. Jacquot et Sh. Vessey, INFLUENCE OF THE NATAL ENVIRONMENT ON DISPERSAL OF WHITE-FOOTED MICE, Behavioral ecology and sociobiology, 37(6), 1995, pp. 407-412
Citations number
47
Categorie Soggetti
Zoology,"Behavioral Sciences
ISSN journal
03405443
Volume
37
Issue
6
Year of publication
1995
Pages
407 - 412
Database
ISI
SICI code
0340-5443(1995)37:6<407:IOTNEO>2.0.ZU;2-T
Abstract
We explored the relationship between several aspects of the natal envi ronment and dispersal distances of white-footed mice, Peromyscus leuco pus, in a 2-ha oak/hickory woodlot northeast of Bowling Green, Ohio, f rom 1991 to 1993. Litters of mice in nestboxes were marked at an early age. We evaluated litter size, the number of males and females in the litter, litter sex ratio, weanling survival to adulthood, and mother' s parity as proximate factors that might affect dispersal. Dispersal w as quantified as the straight-line distance between the mother's cente r of activity and that of her adult offspring. Of 401 mice from 82 lit ters, 78 (19.5%) were recaptured as adults. Males dispersed significan tly farther than females. Females from small litters dispersed shorter distances than females from median or large Litters. Females also dis persed farther with increasing numbers of male siblings. However, the proportion of males in the litter was not related to dispersal distanc e of either sex. Males with two or more sisters dispersed farther than did males with fewer than two sisters. Males from their mother's firs t litter dispersed farther than males from subsequent litters; however , the presence or absence of the mother at the time of dispersal was n ot related to male dispersal distance. Our results suggest that inbree ding avoidance between siblings may lead to male-biased dispersal, and that interactions between siblings may be more important than interac tions with the mother in determining dispersal distances.