Lecture 17 Flashcards

1
Q

What is parental behaviour?

A

Behaviour expressed by parents towards their offspring - providing food, shelter, warmth and social contact

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2
Q

What is the parent-offspring conflict theory?

A

Parental cost is huge, offspring benefit
“offspring are evolutionarly selected to demand more resources than the mother is selected to provide”

parents need some benefit or they might reject offspring

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3
Q

What are some reproductive strategies?

A
  • Litter size (large litter, increase population)
  • Developmental stage of young (altricial vs precocial)
  • Parental investment - non (salmon), single parent, pair-bond
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4
Q

Oligotocous vs polytocous

A
  • Oligotocous: one or few young at each birth
  • Polytocous: large litter at each birth
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5
Q

Which animals are altricial-Oligotocous, precocial-oligotocous, Altricial-polytocouus, and precocial-polytocous?

A
  • Altricial Oligotocous: Primates
  • Precocial Oligotocous: Sheep, horse, cattle
  • Altricial Polytocouus: Carnivores, rodents
  • Precocial Polytocous: Pigs, chickens, ducks

precocialpolytocous is the most efficient

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6
Q

Predator vs prey, single vs multiple, pair-bond vs polygamous for parental care

A
  • Predators tend to be altricial (leave offspring to hunt)
  • Prey need to follow the herd, safety in numbers
  • Single offspring tend to be precocial (most herbivores)
  • Pair-bonds tend to be altricial
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7
Q

What are the two evolutionary strategies for population growth (r vs K selection)?

A

“r” strategist (mice, oyster) - polytocous

  • Unstable environment
  • large number of offspring
  • little or no parental care
  • low survivorship
  • Fast maturing
  • short life expectancy
  • type iii survivorship pattern (never reach carrying capacity)

“K” strategist (elephant)
* Stable environment
* small number of offspring
* large amnount of parental care
* high survivorship
* reach maturity later
* long life expectancy
* type i or ii survivorship pattern

look at graphs for this

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8
Q

What are the two styles of care that precocial ungulates follow?

A
  • Hiders (leave offspring) - deer, cattle
  • Followers - sheep, goats

Cattle- are normally considered hiders but can also behave as followers

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9
Q

What is nursing, suckling, and sucking?

A
  • Nursing - action of the mother, providing milk
  • Suckling - action of offspring to obtain nutrients
  • Sucking - action of offspring directed to non-teat
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10
Q

What is ethology?

A

emphasizes studying animals in their natural environment

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11
Q

What are behaviours at parturition in ewes?

A
  • Ewes separate from flock to give birth
  • Form strong bond with lamb
  • Return to flock with lamb within a few hours
  • Follower species
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12
Q

How do ewes use shelter at parturition?

A
  • Provided either ‘gunny sack’ or grass hedges in lambing paddock
  • Ewes would give birth in close proximity to the hedges
  • ‘Sheltering’ behaviour increased if ewes were recently shorn
  • Hedges improved lamb survival
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13
Q

What is “mismothering”?

A

Pregnant ewe steals offspring of another ewe, then when she has her lambs, she ignores her own

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14
Q

What happened when lambing occured in cubicles?

A
  • ‘Stealing’ was reduced (mismothering)
  • Ewes did not seperate from their lamb by more than 1.2 m
  • Lamb did not leave birth site more than 1 m
  • Twins never separated by more than 0.7 m
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15
Q

How do ewes recognize lambs?

A
  • Birth fluids (strong attraction - cause of mismothering)
  • Individual lamb odour
  • Later - visual and auditory recognition
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16
Q

How do hill sheep and lowland sheep differ in cues?

A
  • Hill sheep: rely more on auditory cues
  • Lowland sheep: rely more on vision

lambs are opportunistic sucklers and they use visual and auditory cues to recognize ewes

17
Q

What post-responsive measures can be done for ewes after lambing in fostering?

A
  • Odour transfer
  • Forced adoption - tehtering, fear
  • Vaginal-cervical stimulation (sometimes lambing happens so fast, this helps release more oxytocin)
18
Q

What is inclusive fitness theory?

A

a family member helps mother in the group produce offspring

19
Q

Alticial vs precocial

A
  • Altricial - hatched or born early in development (carnivores, rodents)
  • Precocial - Hatched or born late in development (ungulates, chicks)
20
Q

What is parental investment and differential investment?

A
  • parental investment- begins with gamete production
  • differential investment - by males and females
    • Eggs- larger investment, limited number (choosy mate selection)
    • Sperm - smaller investment, large numbers (less discriminating mate selection)
21
Q

What are important concepts that we learn from studies?

A
  • Birth site selection
  • maternal responsiveness to lambs
  • strong attraction to birth fluids
  • follower vs hider

these can be applied to domestic management

22
Q

How does ewe and lamb separation occur?

A
  • Initially followers- remain close to ewes
  • later - separation between ewe and lamb increases after several weeks
  • creche formation
23
Q

How does weaning occur in sheep?

A
  • gradual reduction of milk intake
  • nersing bouts- shift from on demand to being controlled by ewe (when demands may impact the next offspring or when there are poor resources)