Age- and tactic-related paternity success in male African elephants |
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Authors: | Rasmussen, H.B. Okello, J.B.A. Wittemyer, G. Siegismund, H.R. Arctander, P. Vollrath, F. Douglas-Hamilton, I. |
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Affiliation: | a Animal Behaviour Research Group, Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3PS, UK b Evolutionary Biology, Department of Biology, University of Copenhagen, Universitetsparken 15 DK-2100 Copenhagen Ø, Denmark c Save the Elephants, P.O. Box 54667, 00200 Nairobi, Kenya d Molecular Biology Laboratory, Makerere University Institute of Environment & Natural Resources, P.O. Box 7298, Kampala, Uganda e Department of Environmental Science, Policy and Management, University of California at Berkeley, 201 Wellman Hall, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA |
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Abstract: | Information on age- and tactic-related paternity success isessential for understanding the lifetime reproductive strategyof males and constitutes an important component of the fitnesstrade-offs that shape the life-history traits of a species.The degree of reproductive skew impacts the genetic structureof a population and should be considered when developing conservationstrategies for threatened species. The behavior and geneticstructure of species with large reproductive skew may be disproportionatelyimpacted by anthropogenic actions affecting reproductively dominantindividuals. Our results on age- and tactic-specific paternitysuccess in male African elephants are the first from a free-rangingpopulation and demonstrate that paternity success increasesdramatically with age, with the small number of older bullsin the competitive state of musth being the most successfulsires. However, nonmusth males sired 20% of genotyped calves,and 60% of mature bulls (>20 years old) were estimated tohave sired offspring during the 5-year study period. The 3 mostsuccessful males sired less than 20% of the genotyped offspring.Hence, contrary to prediction from behavior and life-historytraits, reproduction was not heavily skewed compared with manyother mammalian systems with a similar breeding system. Nevertheless,these results indicate that trophy hunting and ivory poaching,both of which target older bulls, may have substantial behavioraland genetic effects on elephant populations. In addition, theseresults are critical to the current debate on methods for managingand controlling increasing populations of this species. |
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Keywords: | Eelephants musth paternity reproductive strategy skew tactic. |
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