Abstract
AbstractMaternal investment influences the survival and reproduction of both mothers and their progeny and plays a crucial role in understanding individuals’ life-history and population ecology. To reveal the complex mechanisms associated with reproduction and investment, it is necessary to examine variations in maternal investment across species. Comparisons across species call for a standardised method to quantify maternal investment, which remained to be developed. This paper addresses this limitation by introducing the maternal investment metric – MI – for mammalian species, established through the allometric scaling of the litter mass at weaning age by the adult mass and investment duration (i.e. gestation + lactation duration) of a species. Using a database encompassing hundreds of mammalian species, we show that the metric is not highly sensitive to the regression method used to fit the allometric relationship or to the proxy used for adult body mass. The comparison of the maternal investment metric between mammalian subclasses and orders reveals strong differences across taxa. For example, our metric confirms that Eutheria have a higher maternal investment than Metatheria. We discuss how further research could use the maternal investment metric as a valuable tool to understand variation in reproductive strategies.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference92 articles.
1. Bugental, D. B. Maternal Investment. In Encyclopedia of Evolutionary Psychological Science 1–3 (Springer International Publishing, 2016).
2. Trivers, Robert L. Parental investment and sexual selection. In Sexual Selection and the Descent of Man 1871–1971 (Aldine, 1972).
3. Macdonald, K. R., Rotella, J. J., Garrott, R. A. & Link, W. A. Sources of variation in maternal allocation in a long‐lived mammal. J. Anim. Ecol. 89, 1927–1940 (2020).
4. Edward, D. A. & Chapman, T. Mechanisms underlying reproductive trade-offs: costs of reproduction. In Mechanisms of Life History Evolution 137–152 (Oxford University Press, 2011). .
5. Speakman, J. R. Body size, energy metabolism and lifespan. J. Exp. Biol. 208, 1717–1730 (2005).