Abstract

For threatened species or populations, variation in reproductive success among females may be explicitly linked with vulnerability to extinction. Thus, an understanding of factors that may cause variability in reproductive success is important. The population of bottlenose dolphins in Doubtful Sound, New Zealand, has a recent history of rapid population decline and low calf survival rates. A previous study has shown high variability in calf survival among multi- parous females. This study addresses the factors that seem most important in explaining variation in calf survival and thus reproductive success among females in this population. Reproductive data were sourced from a long-term photo-identification dataset, which allowed tracking the fate of 49 calves born into the population between 1995 and 2012. General linear mixed models combined with model averaging were used to assess how birth timing, maternal size, age and potential anthropogenic impacts contributed to variation in calf survival. Models show that a female's size and her ability to give birth at an optimum time in the calving season are significant predictors of calf survival to an age of 1 and 3 yr. This is the first study to demonstrate how birth timing and mother size are correlated with female reproductive success in a cetacean species. These results confirm the importance of demographic stochasticity and reproductive hetero - geneity in small, threatened marine mammal populations.

Highlights

  • Understanding the factors influencing reproduction in threatened species may provide valuable insights into the causes of low population sizes and overall vulnerability to extinction (Craig & Ragen 1999, Baker et al 2007, Berger 2012)

  • This study reveals how females within marine mammal populations can contribute unequally to the reproductive rate of the population, based on biological factors

  • In Doubtful Sound, heterogeneity in female reproductive success is attributable to larger mothers being more successful and the ability of females to give birth at the optimum time

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Summary

Introduction

Understanding the factors influencing reproduction in threatened species may provide valuable insights into the causes of low population sizes and overall vulnerability to extinction (Craig & Ragen 1999, Baker et al 2007, Berger 2012). Differences in reproductive success among females are described in terms of the number of offspring that survive to a Reproductive success may be influenced by a range of social (Côtè & Festa-Bianchet 2001), ecological (Atkinson & Ramsay 1995, Festa-Bianchet & Jorgenson 1998), behavioural (Mann et al 2000) and morphological or physiological factors (Pomeroy et al 1999). The timing of births may be correlated with female reproductive success (Goldizen et al 1988, Majluf 1992).

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