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Mating system of the Eurasian badger, Meles meles, in a high density population

Authors :
Carpenter, P.J.
Pope, L.C.
Greig, C.
Dawson, D.A.
Rogers, L.M.
Erven, K.
Wilson, G.J.
Delahay, R.J.
Cheeseman, C.L.
Burke, T.
Publication Year :
2005

Abstract

Badgers are facultatively social, forming large groups at high density. Group-living appears\ud to have high reproductive costs for females, and may lead to increased levels of inbreeding.\ud The extent of female competition for reproduction has been estimated from field data, but\ud knowledge of male reproductive success and the extent of extra-group paternity remains\ud limited. Combining field data with genetic data (16 microsatellite loci), we studied the mating\ud system of 10 badger social groups across 14 years in a high-density population. From 923\ud badgers, including 425 cubs, we were able to assign maternity to 307 cubs, with both parents\ud assigned to 199 cubs (47%) with 80% confidence, and 14% with 95% confidence. Age had a\ud significant effect on the probability of reproduction, seemingly as a result of a deficit of\ud individuals aged two years and greater than eight years attaining parentage. We estimate\ud that approximately 30% of the female population successfully reproduced in any given\ud year, with a similar proportion of the male population gaining paternity across the same\ud area. While it was known there was a cost to female reproduction in high density populations,\ud it appears that males suffer similar, but not greater, costs. Roughly half of assigned paternity\ud was attributed to extra-group males, the majority of which were from neighbouring social\ud groups. Few successful matings occurred between individuals born in the same social group\ud (22%). The high rate of extra-group mating, previously unquantified, may help reduce inbreeding,\ud potentially making philopatry a less costly strategy.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09621083
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.core.ac.uk....0e43d12dcad1253cb6cf46a217ce4d77