The dilemma of female mate selection in the brown bear, a species with sexually selected infanticide

Author:

Bellemain Eva12,Zedrosser Andreas23,Manel Stéphanie1,Waits Lisette P4,Taberlet Pierre1,Swenson Jon E25

Affiliation:

1. Laboratoire d'Ecologie Alpine, CNRS UMR 5553, Université Joseph FourierBP 53, 38041 Grenoble Cedex 9, France

2. Department of Ecology and Natural Resource Management, Norwegian University of Life SciencesPO Box 5003, 1432 Ås, Norway

3. Department of Integrative Biology, Institute for Wildlife Biology and Game Management, University of Natural Resources and Applied Life SciencesVienna, Peter Jordan Strasse 76, 1190 Vienna, Austria

4. Fish and Wildlife Resources, University of IdahoPO Box 441136, Moscow, ID 83844-1136, USA

5. Norwegian Institute for Nature ManagementTungasletta 2, 7485 Trondheim, Norway

Abstract

Because of differential investment in gametes between sexes, females tend to be the more selective sex. Based on this concept, we investigate mate selection in a large carnivore: the brown bear (Ursus arctos). We hypothesize that, in this species with sexually selected infanticide (SSI), females may be faced with a dilemma: either select a high-quality partner based on phenotypic criteria, as suggested by theories of mate choice, or rather mate with future potentially infanticidal males as a counter-strategy to SSI. We evaluated which male characteristics were important in paternity assignment. Among males available in the vicinity of the females, the largest, most heterozygous and less inbred and also the geographically closest males were more often the fathers of the female's next litter. We suggest that female brown bears may select the closest males as a counter-strategy to infanticide and exercise a post-copulatory cryptic choice, based on physical attributes, such as a large body size, reflecting male genetic quality. However, male–male competition either in the form of fighting before copulation or during the post-copulatory phase, in the form of sperm competition, cannot entirely be ruled out.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

Reference62 articles.

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4. Mating strategies in relation to sexually selected infanticide in a nonsocial carnivore: the brown bear;Bellemain E;Ethology,2005

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