4.5 Article

Richardson's ground squirrel litter size-sex ratio trade-off reveals conditional adaptive sex allocation

Journal

OECOLOGIA
Volume 195, Issue 4, Pages 915-925

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00442-021-04900-3

Keywords

Trivers-Willard hypothesis; Local resource competition; Sex allocation theory; Sex ratio; Sampling bias; Long-term field data

Categories

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
  2. University of Manitoba Graduate Enhancement of Tri-Council
  3. NSERC
  4. Faculty of Science
  5. University of Manitoba Faculty of Science Field Work Support Program

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The study found that female Richardson's ground squirrels tend to produce more female offspring during their first litter, but this trend weakens with increasing litter size, and reverses to favor more male offspring in the third litter, indicating that Adaptive Sex Allocation is a product of interacting selection pressures.
Trivers and Willard proposed that female mammals should adjust their investment in male versus female offspring relative to their ability to produce high-quality offspring. We tested whether litter size-sex ratio trade-offs predicted by Adaptive Sex Allocation (ASA) theory occur among Richardson's ground squirrel (Urocitellus richardsonii) dams over 10 distinct breeding years in a population where individuals experienced variability in food availability and habitat disruption. Litters of primiparous dams became increasingly female-biased with increasing litter size, but that trend waned among second litters born to dams, and reversed among third litters, with larger litters becoming more male-biased, suggesting that ASA is a product of interacting selection pressures. Trade-offs were not associated with habitat disruption, the availability of supplementary food, or dam age. An association between habitat disruption and male-biased sex ratios, the prevalence of litter size-sex ratio trade-offs and placental scar counts exceeding the number of juveniles at weaning in our population, but not in a geographically distinct population of conspecifics exposed to different environmental conditions reveal that the expression of ASA varies among populations and among years within populations, illustrating the conditional nature of ASA.

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