Journal
AMERICAN NATURALIST
Volume 173, Issue 6, Pages E185-E199Publisher
UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/598680
Keywords
life-history theory; trade-off; litter size; offspring size; litter frequency; litter mass
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Funding
- Royal Society Travel Grant
- NSF [DEB-0541625, DEB-0083422]
- NATIONAL CENTER FOR RESEARCH RESOURCES [P20RR018754] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER
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Trade-offs have long been a major theme in life-history theory, but they have been hard to document. We introduce a new method that reveals patterns of divergent trade-offs after adjusting for the pervasive variation in rate of resource allocation to offspring as a function of body size and lifestyle. Results suggest that preweaning vulnerability to predation has been the major factor determining how female placental mammals allocate production between a few large and many small offspring within a litter and between a few large litters and many small ones within a reproductive season. Artiodactyls, perissodactyls, cetaceans, and pinnipeds, which give birth in the open on land or in the sea, produce a few large offspring, at infrequent intervals, because this increases their chances of escaping predation. Insectivores, fissiped carnivores, lagomorphs, and rodents, whose offspring are protected in burrows or nests, produce large litters of small newborns. Primates, bats, sloths, and anteaters, which carry their young from birth until weaning, produce litters of one or a few offspring because of the need to transport and care for them.
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