Abstract

Maternal care influences offspring quality and can improve a mother’s inclusive fitness. However, improved fitness may only occur when offspring quality (i.e., offspring birth mass) persists throughout life and enhances survival and/or reproductive success. Although maternal body mass, age, and social rank have been shown to influence offspring birth mass, the inter-dependence among these variables makes identifying causation problematic. We established that fawn birth mass was related to adult body mass for captive male and female white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus), thus maternal care should improve offspring fitness. We then used path analysis to identify which maternal characteristic(s) most influenced fawn birth mass of captive female white-tailed deer. Maternal age, body mass and social rank had varying effects on fawn birth mass. Maternal body mass displayed the strongest direct effect on fawn birth mass, followed by maternal age and social rank. Maternal body mass had a greater effect on social rank than age. The direct path between social rank and fawn birth mass may indicate dominance as an underlying mechanism. Our results suggest that heavier mothers could use dominance to improve access to resources, resulting in increased fitness through production of heavier offspring.

Highlights

  • Maternal phenotype can have profound implications on life history traits

  • Fawn birth mass was a good predictor of adult body mass (β = 0.296, SE = 0.06, p < 0.001, n = 98; Fig 2)

  • Our top model depicts a direct path from fawn gender and social rank to fawn birth mass, as well as a direct path from maternal age to social rank, these relationships must be interpreted with caution as their 95% confidence intervals overlap 0 (Fig 3)

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Summary

Introduction

Maternal body mass can influence individual longevity [1] and maternal age and body mass can influence offspring characteristics such as parturition date, growth rate and body size at maturity [2]. Maternal body mass can positively influence the probability of reproduction [3], litter size [4, 5] and ability to provide increased pre- and postnatal care [4, 6]. The positive influence of maternal phenotype on prenatal care can influence offspring quality as older and heavier mothers generally produce heavier offspring with increased growth rates compared to younger. Effects of Maternal Characteristics on Fawn Birth Mass and lighter mothers [7,8,9]. Heavier mothers obtain fitness advantages over the long term when compared to lighter mothers [1]

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