Kanaziz Rachel, Huyvaert Kathryn P, Wells Caitlin P, Van Vuren Dirk H, Aubry Lise M
Department of Fish, Wildlife, & Conservation Biology Colorado State University Fort Collins Colorado USA.
Graduate Degree Program in Ecology Colorado State University Fort Collins Colorado USA.
Ecol Evol. 2022 May 11;12(5):e8874. doi: 10.1002/ece3.8874. eCollection 2022 May.
Maternal characteristics, social dynamics, and environmental factors can all influence reproduction and survival and shape trade-offs that might arise between these components of fitness. Short-lived mammals like the golden-mantled ground squirrel (GMGS; ) tend to maximize effort toward current reproduction at the expense of survival but may be complicated by other aspects of the species' life history and environment. Here, we use 25 years of data (1995-2020) collected from a population of GMGS at the Rocky Mountain Biological Research Laboratory in Gothic, Colorado, to test the effect of several maternal characteristics (e.g., age, experience, and timing of litter emergence), social context (e.g., litter sex ratio and kin density), and environmental context (e.g., date of bare ground and length of vegetative growing season) on survival of reproductive female GMGS using Cox proportional hazard models. Our results indicated that social dynamics (i.e., density) and environmental conditions (i.e., standardized first day of permanent snow cover and length of growing season) explained significant variation in annual maternal survival, while maternal characteristics did not. A higher density of related breeding females and the total number of females (both related and unrelated to the focal mother) were associated with an increase in the mortality hazard. A later standardized date of the first day of permanent snow cover and a shorter growing season both reduced the maternal mortality hazard. Together, our results suggest that factors extrinsic to the squirrels affect maternal survival and thus may also influence local population growth and dynamics in GMGS and other short-lived, territorial mammal species.
母体特征、社会动态和环境因素都会影响繁殖和生存,并塑造适合度这些组成部分之间可能出现的权衡。像金背地松鼠(GMGS)这样的短命哺乳动物倾向于以牺牲生存为代价,将努力最大化投入到当前繁殖中,但可能会因该物种生活史和环境的其他方面而变得复杂。在这里,我们使用从科罗拉多州哥特式落基山生物研究实验室的一群金背地松鼠收集的25年数据(1995 - 2020年),使用Cox比例风险模型来测试几个母体特征(例如年龄、经验和产仔出现时间)、社会背景(例如产仔性别比例和亲属密度)以及环境背景(例如裸地日期和营养生长季节长度)对繁殖期雌性金背地松鼠生存的影响。我们的结果表明,社会动态(即密度)和环境条件(即永久积雪覆盖的标准化第一天和生长季节长度)解释了年度母体生存的显著差异,而母体特征则没有。相关繁殖雌性的较高密度以及雌性总数(与焦点母亲相关和不相关的)与死亡风险的增加有关。永久积雪覆盖第一天的较晚标准化日期和较短的生长季节都降低了母体死亡风险。总之,我们的结果表明,松鼠外部的因素会影响母体生存,因此也可能影响金背地松鼠和其他短命、有领地意识的哺乳动物物种的当地种群增长和动态。