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Resource availability alters breeding strategies in a small mammal community

dataset
posted on 2025-08-19, 02:40 authored by Ryan StephensRyan Stephens, Joshua Willems, Mariko Yamasaki, Christine Costello, Rebecca Rowe
<p>Following a resource pulse, animals may finance reproduction by consuming concurrently available resources (income breeding) or by storing resources for future reproduction (capital breeding). Understanding how these reproductive strategies are used is important for determining the ecological mechanisms that structure the timing of reproduction and that drive interannual population fluctuations in animals. We gathered a reproductive dataset for five small mammal species over a 12-year period in Northeastern USA during which six masting events of American beech (<em>Fagus grandifolia</em>) and eastern hemlock (<em>Tsuga canadensis</em>) occurred. Masting created alternate years where seeds were either available late (masting year) or early (cached from the previous year) in the breeding season. The small mammal species differed in reliance on seeds and overwintering strategies. We quantified the diet using stable isotopes and recorded reproduction timing, proportion breeding, and litter size in females and testes size in males. Timing of seed availability minimally affected litter size but strongly affected proportion breeding and timing of reproduction. During masting years (late seed availability), a higher proportion of females reproduced, with breeding taking place later in the season (lactation timed with peak seed availability), although the delay was restricted in <em>Napaeozapus insignis</em>, an obligate hibernator. After a fall mast, cached seeds were used as capital in the following spring (early seed availability) to support a litter that, depending on the species, occurred 24 to 79 days sooner than a mast year. No late-season reproduction occurred in years with early seed availability except for <em>Myodes gapperi</em> which produced a second litter, likely financed by fungal consumption. Males also showed strong responses to seed availability, mirroring female reproduction with testes size staying constant in years with late seed availability and sharply decreasing over the breeding season in years with early seed availability. Our results highlight that although photoperiod and temperature broadly set the bounds of the breeding season in temperate environments, resource availability influences the reproductive strategies that species use, which in turn alters reproductive timing and can drive large inter-annual population fluctuations. Differences in overwintering strategies and diet may further modulate reproductive timing and output relative to resource pulses.</p>

Funding

USDA: 1006881

USDA: 1016133

USDA: 1026211

History

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Data contact name

Stephens, Ryan

Data contact email

stephensrb@etsu.edu

Publisher

Dryad

Theme

  • Not specified

ISO Topic Category

  • biota

National Agricultural Library Thesaurus terms

species; data collection; females; small mammals; reproduction; spring; overwintering; masting; Northeastern United States; lactation; Tsuga canadensis; diet; capital; litter size; Fagus grandifolia; income; temperature; fungi

Pending citation

  • No

Public Access Level

  • Public

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