Extreme polygyny results in intersex differences in age-dependent survival of a highly dimorphic marine mammal

Author:

Volzke Sophia12ORCID,Cleeland Jaimie B.12ORCID,Hindell Mark A.1ORCID,Corney Stuart P.134ORCID,Wotherspoon Simon J.2ORCID,McMahon Clive R.15ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, University of Tasmania, Hobart, TAS 7005, Australia

2. Australian Antarctic Division, Department of Agriculture, Water and the Environment, Kingston, TAS 7050, Australia

3. Centre for Marine Socioecology, University of Tasmania, Hobart, TAS 7005, Australia

4. Australian Antarctic Partnership Program, University of Tasmania, Hobart, TAS 7005, Australia

5. IMOS Animal Tagging, Sydney Institute of Marine Science, Mosman, NSW 2088, Australia

Abstract

Developmental differences in vital rates are especially profound in polygamous mating systems. Southern elephant seals ( Mirounga leonina ) are highly dimorphic and extremely polygynous marine mammals. A demographic model, supported by long-term capture–mark–recapture records, investigated the influence of sex and age on survival in this species. The study revealed clear differences between female and male age-dependent survival rates. Overall juvenile survival estimates were stable around 80–85% for both sexes. However, male survival estimates were 5–10% lower than females in the same age classes until 8 years of age. At this point, male survival decreased rapidly to 50% ± 10% while female estimates remained constant at 80% ± 5%. Different energetic requirements could underpin intersex differences in adult survival. However, the species' strong sexual dimorphism diverges during early juvenile development when sex-specific survival rates were less distinct. Maximizing growth is especially advantageous for males, with size being a major determinant of breeding probability. Maturing males may employ a high-risk high-reward foraging strategy to compensate for extensive sexual selection pressures and sex-specific energetic needs. Our findings suggest sex-specific adult survival is a result of in situ ecological interactions and evolutionary specialization associated with being a highly polygynous marine predator.

Funder

University of Tasmania

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference60 articles.

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