Reproduction, Growth and Body Composition of Rivière George Caribou in Captivity

Twenty females from the Rivière George caribou herd were captured in April 1987 in northern Quebec and were held in a zoo in Quebec City. Until November 1989, they were kept in an enclosure with a male from the same herd and they were fed ad libitum with pelleted concentrates and hay, supplemented w...

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Published in:ARCTIC
Main Authors: Crête, Michel, Huot, Jean, Nault, René, Patenaude, Robert
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: The Arctic Institute of North America 1993
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/64398
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author Crête, Michel
Huot, Jean
Nault, René
Patenaude, Robert
author_facet Crête, Michel
Huot, Jean
Nault, René
Patenaude, Robert
author_sort Crête, Michel
collection Unknown
container_issue 3
container_title ARCTIC
container_volume 46
description Twenty females from the Rivière George caribou herd were captured in April 1987 in northern Quebec and were held in a zoo in Quebec City. Until November 1989, they were kept in an enclosure with a male from the same herd and they were fed ad libitum with pelleted concentrates and hay, supplemented with fresh deciduous leaves in summer. Daily food consumption exhibited an annual cycle, peaking at over 100 g·kg**-0.75 in summer and decreasing to ca. 70 g·kg**-0.75 by late winter. Food consumption decreased at the end of the last summer, due perhaps to lower hay quality. Mean body mass of adult females increased from 90 kg upon arrival at the zoo to ~115 kg in the autumn of 1987, ~125 kg in September 1988, and then decreased to 113 kg in November 1989. Pregnancy rate increased from 65% in 1987 to 82% in 1989 for animals captured in the wild. Two females born in captivity in 1987 became pregnant as yearlings, while 1 of 3 yearling females ovulated in 1989. Mass of calves at birth was higher in 1988 and 1989 than in 1987, while the calving period advanced by two weeks in the last two years. Growth of calves in summer was unrelated to birth mass and was higher in 1987 and 1988 (450-490 g/d) than in 1989 (365 g/d). Male calves grew at a faster rate than females. Carcass composition, in terms of lipids, protein and water, did not differ much between calves and yearlings born in captivity and free-ranging animals collected in 1983-84. However, the mass of each component was much lower in free-ranging lactating females than in captive ones. All captive females that had ovulated before necropsy, including one yearling, had at least 7.2 kg of stored fat.Key words: captivity, caribou, fat, growth, George River, nutrition, protein, Québec, Rangifer tarandus, reproduction Vingt femelles du troupeau de caribous de la rivière George furent capturées en avril 1987 dans le nord du Québec et amenées à un jardin zoologique à Québec. En compagnie d'un mâle du même troupeau, elles furent nourries à volonté de moulée et de foin, ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre Arctic
caribou
Rangifer tarandus
genre_facet Arctic
caribou
Rangifer tarandus
geographic Rivière George
geographic_facet Rivière George
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language English
long_lat ENVELOPE(-66.165,-66.165,58.817,58.817)
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op_source ARCTIC; Vol. 46 No. 3 (1993): September: 189–292; 189-196
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spelling ftunivcalgaryojs:oai:journalhosting.ucalgary.ca:article/64398 2025-06-15T14:14:40+00:00 Reproduction, Growth and Body Composition of Rivière George Caribou in Captivity Crête, Michel Huot, Jean Nault, René Patenaude, Robert 1993-01-01 application/pdf https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/64398 eng eng The Arctic Institute of North America https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/64398/48333 https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/64398 ARCTIC; Vol. 46 No. 3 (1993): September: 189–292; 189-196 1923-1245 0004-0843 Adaptation (Biology) Animal anatomy Animal food Animal growth Animal reproduction Caribou Fats Necropsy Proteins George Rivière region Québec info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion research-article 1993 ftunivcalgaryojs 2025-05-27T03:29:43Z Twenty females from the Rivière George caribou herd were captured in April 1987 in northern Quebec and were held in a zoo in Quebec City. Until November 1989, they were kept in an enclosure with a male from the same herd and they were fed ad libitum with pelleted concentrates and hay, supplemented with fresh deciduous leaves in summer. Daily food consumption exhibited an annual cycle, peaking at over 100 g·kg**-0.75 in summer and decreasing to ca. 70 g·kg**-0.75 by late winter. Food consumption decreased at the end of the last summer, due perhaps to lower hay quality. Mean body mass of adult females increased from 90 kg upon arrival at the zoo to ~115 kg in the autumn of 1987, ~125 kg in September 1988, and then decreased to 113 kg in November 1989. Pregnancy rate increased from 65% in 1987 to 82% in 1989 for animals captured in the wild. Two females born in captivity in 1987 became pregnant as yearlings, while 1 of 3 yearling females ovulated in 1989. Mass of calves at birth was higher in 1988 and 1989 than in 1987, while the calving period advanced by two weeks in the last two years. Growth of calves in summer was unrelated to birth mass and was higher in 1987 and 1988 (450-490 g/d) than in 1989 (365 g/d). Male calves grew at a faster rate than females. Carcass composition, in terms of lipids, protein and water, did not differ much between calves and yearlings born in captivity and free-ranging animals collected in 1983-84. However, the mass of each component was much lower in free-ranging lactating females than in captive ones. All captive females that had ovulated before necropsy, including one yearling, had at least 7.2 kg of stored fat.Key words: captivity, caribou, fat, growth, George River, nutrition, protein, Québec, Rangifer tarandus, reproduction Vingt femelles du troupeau de caribous de la rivière George furent capturées en avril 1987 dans le nord du Québec et amenées à un jardin zoologique à Québec. En compagnie d'un mâle du même troupeau, elles furent nourries à volonté de moulée et de foin, ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic caribou Rangifer tarandus Unknown Rivière George ENVELOPE(-66.165,-66.165,58.817,58.817) ARCTIC 46 3
spellingShingle Adaptation (Biology)
Animal anatomy
Animal food
Animal growth
Animal reproduction
Caribou
Fats
Necropsy
Proteins
George
Rivière
region
Québec
Crête, Michel
Huot, Jean
Nault, René
Patenaude, Robert
Reproduction, Growth and Body Composition of Rivière George Caribou in Captivity
title Reproduction, Growth and Body Composition of Rivière George Caribou in Captivity
title_full Reproduction, Growth and Body Composition of Rivière George Caribou in Captivity
title_fullStr Reproduction, Growth and Body Composition of Rivière George Caribou in Captivity
title_full_unstemmed Reproduction, Growth and Body Composition of Rivière George Caribou in Captivity
title_short Reproduction, Growth and Body Composition of Rivière George Caribou in Captivity
title_sort reproduction, growth and body composition of rivière george caribou in captivity
topic Adaptation (Biology)
Animal anatomy
Animal food
Animal growth
Animal reproduction
Caribou
Fats
Necropsy
Proteins
George
Rivière
region
Québec
topic_facet Adaptation (Biology)
Animal anatomy
Animal food
Animal growth
Animal reproduction
Caribou
Fats
Necropsy
Proteins
George
Rivière
region
Québec
url https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/arctic/article/view/64398