ROOT VOLES - LITTER SEX-RATIO VARIATION IN FRAGMENTED HABITAT

Citation
J. Aars et al., ROOT VOLES - LITTER SEX-RATIO VARIATION IN FRAGMENTED HABITAT, Journal of Animal Ecology, 64(4), 1995, pp. 459-472
Citations number
74
Categorie Soggetti
Ecology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00218790
Volume
64
Issue
4
Year of publication
1995
Pages
459 - 472
Database
ISI
SICI code
0021-8790(1995)64:4<459:RV-LSV>2.0.ZU;2-0
Abstract
1. Litter sex ratio variation in enclosed populations of two strains o f root voles originating from northern and southern Norway was studied in experimentally fragmented habitats during 2. years (1990 and 1991) in the period early July-mid October. 2. Three fragmentation patterns differing with respect to habitat fragment size and interfragment con nectivity (corridors) were colonized by voles from either strain in ea ch of the 9 years; yielding two population replicates per strain and f ragmentation pattern. Litter affiliation of weanlings was decided from a combination of trapping data, marking of lactating mothers with flu orescent powder and marking of nestlings. 3. Habitat fragmentation had no consistent influence on weanling sex ratio at the population level . However, within populations of both strains, mothers inhabiting a ha bitat fragment alone produced more female-biased litters than those sh aring a fragment with other reproductive females. 4. For the south Nor wegian strain, large mothers produced more female-biased litters than small mothers. The southern strain had an overall female-biased weanli ng sex ratio the first year, probably because reproductive females wer e generally heavier in 1990 than in 1991. 5. The results are consisten t with hypotheses predicting that females should adjust the litter sex ratio according to resource availability and social environment at a local scale, as well as to their own competitive ability. It is argued that adaptive sex ratio variation in Microtus is more probably due to spatial variability of fitness returns from daughters than from sons, because females are the philopatric sex and compete at a smaller spat ial scale than males.