Abstract
A trapping study of Antechinus stuartii was conducted in subtropical rain forest in 1971-72. Juveniles
were communal during the period of abundant food and became solitary in autumn when food
diminished. Dyad testing in a field observation cage permitted analysis of social dominance in males.
Dominant males had individual ranges in habitats where resources permitted rapid growth throughout
winter, whereas subordinate males, in poorer habitat, grew slowly. As winter mortality was low, the
advantage of this superior food resource base may lie during the mating season, the more energetic
dominant males being able to mate with more females. The probability of contribution to the gene
pool by subordinate males appears low. Selection for high male reproductive effort is intensified by
the brief annual mating season in this monoestrous species.
The life history of this species appears to be geared to predictable seasonal food resources, but it
may not be optimal throughout the present range, and the species appears to be evolutionarily
trapped.
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
54 articles.
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