Predictors of reproductive cost in female Soay sheep

1. We investigate factors influencing the trade-off between survival and reproduction in female Soay sheep (Ovis aries). Multistate capture-recapture models are used to incorporate the state-specific recapture probability and to investigate the influence of age and ecological conditions on the cost...

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Main Authors: Tavecchia, G, Coulson, T, Morgan, B, Pemberton, J, Pilkington, J, Gulland, F, Clutton-Brock, T
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2005
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author Tavecchia, G
Coulson, T
Morgan, B
Pemberton, J
Pilkington, J
Gulland, F
Clutton-Brock, T
author_facet Tavecchia, G
Coulson, T
Morgan, B
Pemberton, J
Pilkington, J
Gulland, F
Clutton-Brock, T
author_sort Tavecchia, G
collection OXFORD
description 1. We investigate factors influencing the trade-off between survival and reproduction in female Soay sheep (Ovis aries). Multistate capture-recapture models are used to incorporate the state-specific recapture probability and to investigate the influence of age and ecological conditions on the cost of reproduction, defined as the difference between survival of breeder and non-breeder ewes on a logistic scale. 2. The cost is identified as a quadratic function of age, being greatest for females breeding at 1 year of age and when more than 7 years old. Costs, however, were only present during severe environmental conditions (wet and stormy winters occurring when population density was high). 3. Winter severity and population size explain most of the variation in the probability of breeding for the first time at 1 year of life, but did not affect the subsequent breeding probability. 4. The presence of a cost of reproduction was confirmed by an experiment where a subset of females was prevented from breeding in their first year of life. 5. Our results suggest that breeding decisions are quality or condition dependent. We show that the interaction between age and time has a significant effect on variation around the phenotypic trade-off function: selection against weaker individuals born into cohorts that experience severe environmental conditions early in life can progressively eliminate low-quality phenotypes from these cohorts, generating population-level effects. © 2005 British Ecological Society.
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spelling oxford-uuid:774cc24e-b7b4-406f-89c7-2f7c21413c932022-03-26T20:23:02ZPredictors of reproductive cost in female Soay sheepJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:774cc24e-b7b4-406f-89c7-2f7c21413c93EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2005Tavecchia, GCoulson, TMorgan, BPemberton, JPilkington, JGulland, FClutton-Brock, T1. We investigate factors influencing the trade-off between survival and reproduction in female Soay sheep (Ovis aries). Multistate capture-recapture models are used to incorporate the state-specific recapture probability and to investigate the influence of age and ecological conditions on the cost of reproduction, defined as the difference between survival of breeder and non-breeder ewes on a logistic scale. 2. The cost is identified as a quadratic function of age, being greatest for females breeding at 1 year of age and when more than 7 years old. Costs, however, were only present during severe environmental conditions (wet and stormy winters occurring when population density was high). 3. Winter severity and population size explain most of the variation in the probability of breeding for the first time at 1 year of life, but did not affect the subsequent breeding probability. 4. The presence of a cost of reproduction was confirmed by an experiment where a subset of females was prevented from breeding in their first year of life. 5. Our results suggest that breeding decisions are quality or condition dependent. We show that the interaction between age and time has a significant effect on variation around the phenotypic trade-off function: selection against weaker individuals born into cohorts that experience severe environmental conditions early in life can progressively eliminate low-quality phenotypes from these cohorts, generating population-level effects. © 2005 British Ecological Society.
spellingShingle Tavecchia, G
Coulson, T
Morgan, B
Pemberton, J
Pilkington, J
Gulland, F
Clutton-Brock, T
Predictors of reproductive cost in female Soay sheep
title Predictors of reproductive cost in female Soay sheep
title_full Predictors of reproductive cost in female Soay sheep
title_fullStr Predictors of reproductive cost in female Soay sheep
title_full_unstemmed Predictors of reproductive cost in female Soay sheep
title_short Predictors of reproductive cost in female Soay sheep
title_sort predictors of reproductive cost in female soay sheep
work_keys_str_mv AT tavecchiag predictorsofreproductivecostinfemalesoaysheep
AT coulsont predictorsofreproductivecostinfemalesoaysheep
AT morganb predictorsofreproductivecostinfemalesoaysheep
AT pembertonj predictorsofreproductivecostinfemalesoaysheep
AT pilkingtonj predictorsofreproductivecostinfemalesoaysheep
AT gullandf predictorsofreproductivecostinfemalesoaysheep
AT cluttonbrockt predictorsofreproductivecostinfemalesoaysheep