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Parturient behaviour of a viviparous skink: evidence for maternal cannibalism when basking opportunity is low
Authors:Amanda J Caldwell  Alison Cree
Institution:1. Department of Zoology, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand;2. School of Biological Sciences, University of Tasmania, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia
Abstract:We documented the behaviour of pregnant McCann’s skinks (Oligosoma maccanni) before, during and after parturition. Females were maintained in captivity from early pregnancy under thermal environments differing in basking opportunity (low, mid and high regimes). Thermal regime during pregnancy had little influence on maternal behaviours, including basking behaviour prior to birth and the duration of, and site selection for, labour. The majority of births (78%) occurred in the open and warm areas. Most females (61%; n?=?102 births, n?=?36 females) aided offspring post-birth by biting them free of the enclosing extra-embryonic membrane. Some females from the low regime consumed non-viable offspring, but whether this is a consistent difference among females held under different basking regimes requires further study. Many females (c. 79%) also exhibited a brief transient decrease in control of hind-limbs post-birth. Further studies on other squamates are recommended to shed light on the evolutionary history and possible conservation consequences of maternal behaviour during parturition.
Keywords:Birth  Eugongylinae  labour  New Zealand  Oligosoma maccanni  pregnancy  viviparity
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