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The biology of the stoat (Mustela erminea) in the National Parks of New Zealand IV. Reproduction
Authors:CM King  JE Moody
Institution:1. Ecology Division Department of Scientific and Industrial Research , Private Bag, Lower Hutt , New Zealand;2. 3 Waerenga Road, Eastbourne , New Zealand;3. Ecology Division Department of Scientific and Industrial Research , Private Bag, Lower Hutt , New Zealand
Abstract:Abstract

The gonads of 528 female and 821 male stoats were examined. The weights of ovaries and testes in adults peaked simultaneously in October, the season of births and of post-partum oestrus. Of 73 females, 78% had even numbers of nipples, mostly 8 or 10. The mean number of embryos in 13 pregnancies was 8.8 (6–13), and embryo weights ranged from 0.005 g to 2.9 g. Of 11 pregnant females, 8 contained fewer embryos than corpora lutea, and there was evidence of transuterine migration of blastocysts in 6. All but 2 of 451 females caught in December–July inclusive carried corpora lutea of delay. Few adult and no young females were found in oestrus in September–October, though adult males were fertile from August to February (no first-year males were fertile). There was some evidence that the breeding season started later at more southerly latitudes in both males and females. The mean number of corpora lutea per female was 9.7 (n = 439), and there was a significant inverse correlation between counts for the 2 ovaries of one individual. There was generally no significant variation in fecundity of females with age, body weight, or year. Of 11 females which were considered to have lost their litters, 10 were collected in beech (Nothofagus) forests. Four females and 9 males had abnormal gonads; the most severe abnormality was an ovarian teratoma of unknown pathology.
Keywords:Mustela erminea  New Zealand National Parks  trapping  reproductive cycle  fecundity  gonads
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