Sex-specific patterns in body mass and mating system in the Siberian flying squirrel
Selonen V; Wistbacka R; Santangeli A
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2021042715724
Tiivistelmä
Background
Reproductive strategies and
evolutionary pressures differ between males and females. This often
results in size differences between the sexes, and also in sex-specific
seasonal variation in body mass. Seasonal variation in body mass is also
affected by other factors, such as weather. Studies on sex-specific
body mass patterns may contribute to better understand the mating system
of a species. Here we quantify patterns underlying sex-specific body
mass variation using a long-term dataset on body mass in the Siberian
flying squirrel, Pteromys volans.
Results
We show that female flying
squirrels were larger than males based on body mass and other body
measures. Males had lowest body mass after the breeding season, whereas
female body mass was more constant between seasons, when the pregnancy
period was excluded. Male body mass did not increase before the mating
season, despite the general pattern that males with higher body mass are
usually dominant in squirrel species. Seasonal body mass variation was
linked to weather factors, but this relationship was not straightforward
to interpret, and did not clearly affect the trend in body mass
observed over the 22 years of study.
Conclusions
Our study supports the view
that arboreal squirrels often deviate from the general pattern found in
mammals for larger males than females. The mating system seems to be the
main driver of sex-specific seasonal body mass variation in flying
squirrels, and conflicting selective pressure may occur for males to
have low body mass to facilitate gliding versus high body mass to
facilitate dominance.
Kokoelmat
- Rinnakkaistallenteet [19207]