Abstract

Age at primiparity (AP) is a key life history trait which is crucial to the evolution of life history strategies. This trait is particularly interesting in pinnipeds (walrus, eared seals, and true seals), which are monotocous animals. Thus, the commonly observed trade‐off between offspring quality and quantity does not apply to this taxon. Therefore, comparative studies on the evolution of AP might shed light on other important evolutionary correlates when litter size is fixed. Using phylogenetic generalized least squares analyses, we found a strong negative and robust correlation between relative birth mass (mean pup birth mass as a proportion of mean adult female mass) and AP. Rather than trading‐off an early start of reproduction with light relative offspring mass, this result suggests that pinnipeds exhibit either faster (i.e., higher relative offspring mass leading to shorter lactation length, and thus shorter interbirth interval) or slower life histories and that an early AP and a heavy relative offspring mass co‐evolved into a comparatively fast life history strategy. On the other hand, AP was positively related to lactation length: A later start of reproduction was associated with a longer lactation length. Consequently, variation in AP in pinnipeds seems to be affected by an interplay between costs and benefits of early reproduction mediated by relative investment into the single offspring via relative birth mass and lactation length.

Highlights

  • We found that across pinniped species, only two of our variables were significantly associated with interspecific variation in at primiparity (AP)

  • Not even female body mass was positively associated with AP

  • An earlier start of the reproductive career was associated with heavy pups relative to the female's mean body mass and a late start was associated with light pups relative to the female's mean body mass

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Summary

| MATERIALS AND METHODS

We collated available data on all 34 currently recognized, extant, and one recently extinct pinniped species from the literature In order to identify traits with correlated evolution, we analyzed our data using the phylogenetic generalized least square (PGLS) method (Freckleton, 2009; Revell, 2010), based on the complete phylog‐ eny of all pinniped species of Higdon, Bininda‐Emonds, Beck, and Ferguson (2007) with the Galapagos sea lion (Zalophus wollebaeki) added with a split from the California sea lion at 2.3 million years ago (Wolf, Tautz, & Trillmich, 2007). The high lambda values indicate a strong phylogenetic signal, that is closely related species tend to re‐ semble each other more. This is quite likely due to the three pinniped families combined in the same tree

| DISCUSSION
Findings
CONFLICT OF INTEREST
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