Abstract

Differences in reproductive roles between the sexes may lead to sexual dimorphism in body composition. Body size and composition of three species of small mammals (bushy-tailed wood rats (Neotoma cinerea Ord), deer mice (Peromyscus maniculatus Wagner), and red-backed voles (Clethrionomys gapperi Vigors)) were analyzed to test the predictions that (i) males will have more muscle mass than females and (ii) females will have more fat than males. Results supported the first prediction but not the second. For all three species, males had more lean dry mass relative to body size than females, but females did not have relatively more fat than males. Muscle mass of males may aid in mate-searching and mate-guarding activities, but fat content may not differ between the sexes because female small mammals depend on increased ingestion rates, rather than fat stores, to support reproduction.

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