Data from: Sources of variation in maternal allocation in a long-lived mammal ...

Life history theory predicts allocation of energy to reproduction varies with maternal age but additional maternal features may be important to the allocation of energy to reproduction. We aimed to characterize age-specific variation in maternal allocation and assess the relationship between materna...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Macdonald, Kaitlin R., Rotella, Jay J., Garrott, Robert A., Link, William A.
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: Dryad 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.f1vhhmgtb
https://datadryad.org/stash/dataset/doi:10.5061/dryad.f1vhhmgtb
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Summary:Life history theory predicts allocation of energy to reproduction varies with maternal age but additional maternal features may be important to the allocation of energy to reproduction. We aimed to characterize age-specific variation in maternal allocation and assess the relationship between maternal allocation and other static and dynamic maternal features. Mass measurements of 531 mothers and pups were used with Bayesian hierarchical models to explain the relationship between diverse maternal attributes and both the proportion of mass allocated by Weddell seal mothers, and the efficiency of mass transfer from mother to pup during lactation as well as the weaning mass of pups. Our results demonstrated that maternal mass was strongly and positively associated with the relative reserves allocated by a mother and a pup’s weaning mass but that the efficiency of mass transfer declines with maternal parturition mass. Birthdate was positively associated with proportion mass allocation and pup weaning mass, but ... : Each year since 2002, attempts were made to weigh a sample of mother-pup pairs at parturition, and later at 20 days after parturition for a mid-lactation mass and 35 days after parturition for a late-lactation mass. Not all mother pup pairs were available for weighing on target dates therefore weights were obtained 1-4 days after parturition, 15-25 days after parturition and 30-40 days after parturition. Pups were weighed using a spring scale or digital weighing platform and mothers were weighed using either a digital weighing platform, photogrammetric methods, or both (Ireland et al. 2006; Paterson et al. 2016). Due to the difficulty in obtaining maternal mass measurements with a weighing platform throughout lactation, photogrammetry has been used to estimate the mass of Weddell seal mothers since 2002. Photographs of mothers from 2002-2010 were taken using a two-dimensional photogrammetry technique described by Ireland et al. (2006). For photogrammetry data collected during 2012-2016, photographs of ...