Publication | Closed Access
Grey seal, <i>Halichoerus grypus</i>, energetics: females invest more in male offspring
130
Citations
24
References
1987
Year
Breeding BehaviorFitnessEducationSexual SelectionLactationInterspecific Behavioral InteractionLarge FemalesMale PupsAnimal PhysiologyReproductive SuccessGrey SealBiologyAnimal ScienceGrey Seal FemalesEvolutionary BiologyPhysiologyNatural SciencesAnimal BehaviorMale OffspringComparative Physiology
Grey seal females transfer large amounts of energy to their pups during the brief lactation period. The costs of lactation have been measured using weight changes of mother and pup pairs. Large females come ashore to give birth earlier in the season and lose weight more rapidly than smaller females. The sex ratio of Grey seal pups born is skewed towards males in the early part of the breeding season. Male pups are larger at birth and gain weight more rapidly than female pups, and their mothers show a correspondingly faster rate of weight loss than mothers of female pups. The energy costs of gestation and lactation to a Grey seal mother are 31 GJ for male pups and2–8 GJ for female pups. Males are therefore 10% more costly in energy terms to raise to weaning. Because, on average, large females arrive at breeding sites before smaller animals, biased results on weight changes would be obtained from methods which do not use repeated weighings. We suggest that the high efficiencies of lactation estimated for Harp seals compared with other phocid seals could be accounted for by such a bias.
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