Abstract

Long-lived, highly social species with prolonged offspring dependency can show long postreproductive periods. The Mother hypothesis proposes that a need for extended maternal care of offspring together with increased maternal mortality risk associated with old age select for such postreproductive survival, but tests in species with long postreproductive periods, other than humans and marine mammals, are lacking. Here, we investigate the Mother hypothesis with longitudinal data on Asian elephants from timber camps of Myanmar 1) to determine the costs of reproduction on female age-specific mortality risk within 1 year after calving and 2) to quantify the effects of mother loss on calf survival across development. We found that older females did not show an increased immediate mortality risk after calving. Calves had a 10-fold higher mortality risk in their first year if they lost their mother, but this decreased with age to only a 1.1-fold higher risk in the fifth year. We also detected delayed effects of maternal death: calves losing their mother during early ages still suffered from increased mortality risk at ages 3-4 and during adolescence but such effects were weaker in magnitude. Consequently, the Mother hypothesis could account for the first 5 years of postreproductive survival, but there were no costs of continued reproduction on the immediate maternal mortality risk. However, the observed postreproductive lifespan of females surviving to old age commonly exceeds 5 years in Asian elephants, and further studies are thus needed to determine selection for (postreproductive) lifespan in elephants and other comparably long-lived species.

Highlights

  • Social, long-lived mammals are characterized by extended parental care and investment (Carey 2003)

  • Age-specific risk of maternal death after calving The death of a female within 1 year after calving was rare as only 1.4% of all 2426 births ended in maternal mortality, equating to (a) 0.10

  • The Mother hypothesis proposes that animals that have the longest infant dependency and suffer from high costs of reproduction at old ages should have the longest postreproductive lifespans (Williams 1957)

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Summary

Introduction

Long-lived mammals are characterized by extended parental care and investment (Carey 2003). In these species, a considerable mismatch between reproductive and somatic senescence can evolve (Lee 2003; Bourke 2007). The postreproductive lifespan can be relatively long compared with many other mammals in elephants (Cohen 2004; Lahdenperä et al 2014), the adaptive hypotheses for the evolution of postreproductive lifespan have not been tested in long-lived terrestrial species other than humans (see Ward et al 2009; Foster et al 2012 for tests in killer whales)

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