Reproductive Responses to Variation in Temperature and Food Supply by House Mice: II. Lactation1
- 1 November 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Biology of Reproduction
- Vol. 37 (4) , 844-850
- https://doi.org/10.1095/biolreprod37.4.844
Abstract
Lactating HS/Ibg house mice housed at 21.degree. C and 5.degree. C were assigned to 3 feeding regimes: ad libitum, daily rations of 80% of ad libitum, or 60% of ad libitum beginning on the day that they bore litters. Significant interaction between temperature and food restriction was found for litter survivorship, pup survivorship, litter size, female body weight, and cumulative biomass production. The interaction was due to a magnification of the effects of food restriction at the colder temperature: i.e. mice fed ad libitum were similar at the two temperatures, mice fed the 80% ration differed, and mice fed the 60% ration differed to a greater extent. The dominant response to food restriction was cannibalism by females, which might be associated with the rate of loss in body weight by the female on the days preceding cannibalism of one or more pups. Incidents of cannibalism tended to involve a limited number of pups and to be repeated until a sustainable litter size was reached. In 3 of the food-restricted treatments, females weaned relatively large litters of relatively small pups, but in the most severe treatment (in the group fed the 60% ration at 5.degree. C), the females weaned small litters of large pups. The patterns of cannibalism and variable relative investment in individual pups reflect the aggressive breeding strategy of this classic colonizing species.This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
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