M. Festabianchet et Jt. Jorgenson, SELFISH MOTHERS - REPRODUCTIVE EXPENDITURE AND RESOURCE AVAILABILITY IN BIGHORN EWES, Behavioral ecology, 9(2), 1998, pp. 144-150
When resources are scarce, iteroparous females may value their subsequ
ent survival and reproduction over their current off-spring's developm
ent and survival. Field data to test this hypothesis are scant because
it is difficult to determine whether reduced development of juveniles
when resources are scarce is due to maternal restraint or constraint.
During a 24-year study of bighorn sheep (Ovis canadensis), lamb mass
near the time of weaning was very weakly correlated with maternal mass
. A weak maternal mass effect persisted for body mass of yearlings of
both sexes. As the number of adult ewes tripled, summer mass gain by l
ambs decreased about 22%, while summer mass gain by mothers decreased
only 9%. Maternal expenditure (the residual of the regression of lamb
mass and maternal mass in mid-September) was much lower at high than a
t low population density. For individual females, maternal expenditure
was correlated with winter mass loss, but had no other overt short-te
rm costs. Our results suggest that most bighorn ewes adopt a conservat
ive maternal care strategy and reduce maternal care when resources are
scarce to favor their own mass gain over the development of their lam
bs.