Abstract

The killing of young by unrelated males is widespread in the animal kingdom. In short-lived small rodents, females can mate immediately after delivery (post-partum oestrus) and invest in future reproduction, but infanticide may put the nestlings, their current reproductive investment, at risk. Here, we investigated the behavioural trade-offs between mating interest and nest protection in an arena experiment with bank voles (Myodes glareolus). Non-gravid females (n = 33) were housed at one end of a large structured arena with their nestlings. Different scents (cage bedding) were presented to each female in a replicated design. Three combinations of mating opportunities and male-female familiarity were simulated using different scent donors: mating opportunity with the sire of the nestlings with whom the female was familiar; mating opportunity with a male unrelated to the offspring and unfamiliar to the female, thus posing a higher risk to the offspring; and neither risk nor mating opportunity (clean control). Most females investigated male scents, regardless of familiarity, leaving their litter unprotected. During control treatment, females with larger litters spent less time at the scent area, indicating increasing nursing demands or better protection. Females with older litters visited scents more often, suggesting an increased interest in reproduction while they are non-gravid alongside the decreased risk of infanticide for older young. In the presence of unfamiliar scents, females spent more time protecting their nests, supporting the perceived association of unfamiliarity with infanticide risk. Thus, rodent females flexibly allocate time spent between searching for a mate and protecting their nest, which is modulated by their familiarity with a potential intruder.Significance statementInfanticide by conspecific males is an extreme form of sexual conflict and has large costs on females, abolishing their investment into current offspring. In an experimental approach, we exposed lactating female bank voles to different combinations of mating opportunity and familiarity to a (simulated) intruder: (1) the sire of the nestlings with whom the female was familiar and, therefore, potentially less risky in terms of infanticide; (2) a male which was unrelated and unfamiliar to the female and thus posed a higher risk to the offspring; or (3) as a control, cage bedding, which posed neither risk of infanticide nor a mating opportunity. We show that females flexibly allocated pup protection and mating interest based on their familiarity with the male, indicating that the unfamiliar males pose a threat to offspring, which is perceived by the females. Females further adjusted their behaviour to the size and/or age of their current litter, investing more time in male scents when offspring were older, thus balancing future and current investments into reproduction.

Highlights

  • Infanticide, the killing of conspecific young, is a widespread behavioural trait across mammals

  • We investigated allocation into current and future reproduction by measuring responses of nursing bank vole females to differences in levels of infanticide risk, by mimicking the presence of the sire of her litter or of an unfamiliar male, both providing mating opportunities

  • We found that females spent more time investigating an area far from the nest when male scents were provided than under controls, irrespective of their familiarity to the male

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Summary

Introduction

Infanticide, the killing of conspecific young, is a widespread behavioural trait across mammals. While the male may increase its share of offspring in the generation, the female loses a large reproductive investment. Infanticide is common in species with harem structures and strong reproductive skew among males (Lukas and Huchard 2014), giving the perpetrator access to reproduction with the female that lost its offspring (Hrdy 1979) and limiting the reproductive success of male competitors that sired the killed offspring (Agrell et al 1998; Ebensperger 1998; Ebensperger and Blumstein 2007; Hrdy 1979). In monogamous and polygynandrous species, the adaptive value of this male trait is less clear. In many polygynandrous rodent species, females mate directly after delivering young (post-partum oestrus), slightly delay implantation, and simultaneously invest energy into both lactation and the new pregnancy. The loss of young advances the date of birth of the new litter (Gustafsson et al 1980), and the size of the new litter can be larger (Elwood and Kennedy 1990)

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