Abstract

In species providing extended parental care, one or both parents care for altricial young over a period including more than one breeding season. We expect large parental investment and long‐term dependency within family units to cause high variability in life trajectories among individuals with complex consequences at the population level. So far, models for estimating demographic parameters in free‐ranging animal populations mostly ignore extended parental care, thereby limiting our understanding of its consequences on parents and offspring life histories.We designed a capture–recapture multievent model for studying the demography of species providing extended parental care. It handles statistical multiple‐year dependency among individual demographic parameters grouped within family units, variable litter size, and uncertainty on the timing at offspring independence. It allows for the evaluation of trade‐offs among demographic parameters, the influence of past reproductive history on the caring parent's survival status, breeding probability, and litter size probability, while accounting for imperfect detection of family units. We assess the model performance using simulated data and illustrate its use with a long‐term dataset collected on the Svalbard polar bears (Ursus maritimus).Our model performed well in terms of bias and mean square error and in estimating demographic parameters in all simulated scenarios, both when offspring departure probability from the family unit occurred at a constant rate or varied during the field season depending on the date of capture. For the polar bear case study, we provide estimates of adult and dependent offspring survival rates, breeding probability, and litter size probability. Results showed that the outcome of the previous reproduction influenced breeding probability.Overall, our results show the importance of accounting for i) the multiple‐year statistical dependency within family units, ii) uncertainty on the timing at offspring independence, and iii) past reproductive history of the caring parent. If ignored, estimates obtained for breeding probability, litter size, and survival can be biased. This is of interest in terms of conservation because species providing extended parental care are often long‐living mammals vulnerable or threatened with extinction.

Highlights

  • 49 Parental care includes any pre-natal and post-natal allocation, such as feeding and protecting59 the young, which benefits the offspring development and survival chances, thereby enhancing51 the parent’s reproductive success (Trivers 1972)

  • In species providing extended parental care, one or both parents care for altricial young over 16 a period including more than one breeding season

  • The transition rates correspond here 52 to the demographic parameters corrected for imperfect detection and state uncertainty

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Summary

Introduction

49 Parental care includes any pre-natal and post-natal allocation, such as feeding and protecting59 the young, which benefits the offspring development and survival chances, thereby enhancing51 the parent’s reproductive success (Trivers 1972). Altricial mammals having offspring that need 6 to learn complex skills to ensure survival beyond independence, such as hunting, orientation, 53 or nest building, show extended parental care (hereafter EPC; Clutton-Brock 1991). 54 as a prolonged period, i.e. lasting more than one breeding season, over which one or both 13 parents care for one or several dependent young. This period typically lasts for several years.

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