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Forage quality of consecutive years interact to affect body condition, reproductive rate and rut phenology in Iberian red deer

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journal.pone.0278367.pdf (749.5Kb)
Author
Fernández Millán, Marina
Carranza Almansa, Juan
Seoane, José Manuel
Pérez-González, Javier
Publisher
Public Library Of Science (PLOS)
Date
2022
Subject
Iberian red deer
Cervus elaphus
Animal body condition
Climate change
Carry-over effect
Animal reproduction
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Abstract
Body condition for reproduction in capital breeders such as the red deer (Cervus elaphus) is mostly determined by their stored energy reserves. Thus, environmental conditions and resource availability may affect reproductive performance and breeding success. In warm Mediterranean regions, current climate change is driving to a hotter and drier scenario that is expected to affect the biology and dynamics of many populations. We examined the impact of these local climate variations on red deer body condition and the relationship with female reproductive phenology and breeding success. We used satellite information of landscape vegetation along with a 22-year data series of direct field behavioural observations during the rutting season in Doñana National Park (SW Spain). We analyzed faecal nitrogen content (FN) from faeces collected during the rut. We found that poor vegetation availability in drier years was related to worse body condition of deer (measured by FN) and a delay in the rutting season, which associated with lower reproductive rates (measured by the proportion of females with calves observed the next year). We also evidenced an interesting interaction between environmental conditions in consecutive years on the timing of breeding season, with timing of breeding being more delayed when previous year resource availability was high and many females bred, and the consecutive one was poor, so females hardly recovered condition and the rut occurred later. These findings highlight the carry-over effect of reproduction in capital breeders and the potential impact of climate-change conditions on red deer breeding.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10396/24480
Fuente
PLoS ONE 17(12): e0278367 (2022)
Versión del Editor
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0278367
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