Age at maturity in cavies: Are precocial mammals different?

Trillmich F, Soetemann C, Clara M (2007)
Ecoscience 14(3): 300-305.

Zeitschriftenaufsatz | Veröffentlicht | Englisch
 
Download
Es wurden keine Dateien hochgeladen. Nur Publikationsnachweis!
Autor*in
Trillmich, FritzUniBi ; Soetemann, Carola; Clara, Mario
Abstract / Bemerkung
In short-lived mammals, age at maturity is a particularly important parameter influencing lifetime fitness. Age at maturity proves highly variable in altricial rodents, but little is known for small precocial rodents of the order Caviomorpha. Even though extreme precociality implies early maturation, female cavies and guinea-pigs (genus Cavia) advance puberty considerably in the presence of males. We briefly review earlier findings and compare them to data from altricial rodents. We report experiments on 2 very similar species of cavy, the dark-backed (C. magna) and the wild cavy (C. aperea). In the dark-backed cavy, we tested whether the male signal responsible for acceleration of maturity is a chemical in urine, as demonstrated for mice. Females exposed twice daily to male urine on their nares matured at the same age (73-75 d) and mass (around 330 g, 4 times birth mass) as females treated with water. Thus, chemicals in urine did not replace the effect of male presence. Two experiments with wild cavies showed that male presence without physical contact was sufficient to accelerate puberty, even though physical interaction leads to even earlier maturation. Presence of a male during the first 10 d of life only did not lead to advanced maturation in young females. Functionally, it may be more correct to speak of a delay in the onset of maturity in the absence of males rather than considering male presence to stimulate early maturation. Comparative evidence suggests that precocial species generally mature earlier than altricials.
Stichworte
puberty; Covia magna; life history; chemical communication; Cavia aperea; maturation
Erscheinungsjahr
2007
Zeitschriftentitel
Ecoscience
Band
14
Ausgabe
3
Seite(n)
300-305
ISSN
1195-6860
Page URI
https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/1631784

Zitieren

Trillmich F, Soetemann C, Clara M. Age at maturity in cavies: Are precocial mammals different? Ecoscience. 2007;14(3):300-305.
Trillmich, F., Soetemann, C., & Clara, M. (2007). Age at maturity in cavies: Are precocial mammals different? Ecoscience, 14(3), 300-305. https://doi.org/10.2980/1195-6860(2007)14[300:AAMICA]2.0.CO;2
Trillmich, Fritz, Soetemann, Carola, and Clara, Mario. 2007. “Age at maturity in cavies: Are precocial mammals different?”. Ecoscience 14 (3): 300-305.
Trillmich, F., Soetemann, C., and Clara, M. (2007). Age at maturity in cavies: Are precocial mammals different? Ecoscience 14, 300-305.
Trillmich, F., Soetemann, C., & Clara, M., 2007. Age at maturity in cavies: Are precocial mammals different? Ecoscience, 14(3), p 300-305.
F. Trillmich, C. Soetemann, and M. Clara, “Age at maturity in cavies: Are precocial mammals different?”, Ecoscience, vol. 14, 2007, pp. 300-305.
Trillmich, F., Soetemann, C., Clara, M.: Age at maturity in cavies: Are precocial mammals different? Ecoscience. 14, 300-305 (2007).
Trillmich, Fritz, Soetemann, Carola, and Clara, Mario. “Age at maturity in cavies: Are precocial mammals different?”. Ecoscience 14.3 (2007): 300-305.
Export

Markieren/ Markierung löschen
Markierte Publikationen

Open Data PUB

Web of Science

Dieser Datensatz im Web of Science®
Suchen in

Google Scholar