Abstract

Parental provisioning of offspring is an intensive energetic investment that is expected to compromise future offspring production. This trade-off is particularly salient for mammals in which mothers bear the exclusive burden of lactation and draw from their own energy reserves to provision offspring. The degree to which lactation impacts future reproductive ability should vary not only by the absolute cost of milk production but also by the ability of individual mothers to afford it. Few studies have been able to quantify the costs of lactation or how they affect reproductive rates. Here, we examine the metabolic load of lactation in chimpanzees, a species with intensive parental investment and extremely slow reproductive rates. We used urinary C-peptide of insulin to trace changes in energetic condition in 17 wild, unprovisioned chimpanzee mothers in Kibale National Park, Uganda. C-peptide levels of nursing mothers were depressed for six months postpartum, thereafter showing a net increase through the second year. These changes are consistent with milestones of infant physical and behavioral development. Mothers inhabiting lower quality foraging areas experienced a higher metabolic load of lactation, as indicated by lower C-peptide profiles than mothers in food-rich areas. Ovarian activity was closely correlated with energetic condition. Cycling resumed only after a sustained period of energy gain, suggesting that the slow reproductive pattern in wild chimpanzees results not only from the direct expense of milk production but also from the long period that mothers require to recover their physical condition in a food-limited environment. Key wor ds: C-peptide of insulin, energy balance, interbirth inter vals, lactation, reproduction, weaning. [Behav Ecol]

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