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Lactation in the Ringed Seal (<i>Phoca hispida</i>)
132
Citations
9
References
1991
Year
NutritionMammalian PhysiologyAnatomyRinged SealUnicellular OrganismBody CompositionLactationCross-sectional DataMaternal NutritionPublic HealthAnimal PhysiologyAnimal NutritionMaternal HealthNorwegian ArcticPregnancy NutritionBiologyBody SizeAnimal SciencePhysiologyInfant NutritionFeed IntakePup Growth RateMedicineComparative Physiology
Length of lactation, pup growth rate, and female weight loss in ringed seals (Phoca hispida) were estimated using cross-sectional data from the Canadian and Norwegian Arctic. At birth the pups had a standard length of 63.4 cm (SE = 1.3, N = 11) and weighed 5.4 kg (SE = 0.4, N = 6). Weaning occurred approximately 39 d (range 36–41 d) after birth at an estimated length of 88.4 cm (SE = 0.65, N = 96) and an estimated weight of 22.1 kg, resulting in an increase in length of 0.64 cm∙d −1 and a weight change of 0.43 kg∙d −1 . Regression of female weight on the number of days after the nominal date of birth for each region indicated that the postpartum female weighed 81.2 kg and lost 0.64 kg∙d −1 (95% CI = ±0.20). During lactation, female weight declined by an estimated 32%, with much of the loss occurring from the blubber. Analyses of stomachs indicated that ringed seals supplemented stored energy reserves by feeding during lactation.
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