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Maternal effort and joey growth in koalas ( Phascolarctos cinereus )
Author(s) -
Tobey J. R.,
Andrus C. H.,
Doyle L.,
Thompson V. D.,
Bercovitch F. B.
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
journal of zoology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.915
H-Index - 96
eISSN - 1469-7998
pISSN - 0952-8369
DOI - 10.1111/j.1469-7998.2005.00041.x
Subject(s) - phascolarctos cinereus , biology , offspring , survivorship curve , ecology , mating , sexual dimorphism , demography , zoology , population , pregnancy , cancer , sociology , genetics
The extent to which sex‐biased maternal investment characterizes mammals is controversial, with less information available for evaluating patterns of maternal effort in marsupials than in placentals. Koalas Phascolarctos cinereus are size‐dimorphic animals with a lengthy period of dependency and they reside in mating systems that might favour sex‐biased maternal investment. We examined 18 years of data recorded from koalas living at the San Diego Zoo in order to examine how joey development and maternal condition might be connected. Koalas are pregnant for only 1 month, but joey emergence from the pouch does not occur until 32 weeks of age. Neither maternal condition nor age affected sex ratio at joey emergence, and both sexes had the same survivorship prospects. Koala dams transport and nurse joeys for close to 1 year, at which time the two sexes are size dimorphic. Given the poor‐quality diet of koalas, combined with maternal transport of infants who are at least 25% of maternal mass, we suggest that infant rearing poses high energetic costs on koala females. We suggest that ecological and energetic constraints have moulded koala maternal strategies such that females maximize allocation of resources to offspring, regardless of sex, in order to increase prospects for joey survivorship.

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