Mammalian parental investment (i.e. care of descendant offspring) is largely biased towards maternal contributions due to the specific feeding needs of mammalian offspring; however, varying degrees of paternal investment have been reported in about 10% of all mammalian species. Within the order Carnivora, paternal contribution to rearing offspring is particularly high: an estimated 32% of all studied carnivore species exhibit direct paternal care. Despite the prominence of paternal investment in carnivores, the endocrine basis of this behaviour is not well understood. This review examines the current – highly constrained – state of knowledge about the endocrine basis of carnivore paternal investment. We attempt to link changes in androgen a...
In biparental systems, sexual conflict over parental investment predicts that the parent providing c...
Natural variations in parenting are associated with differences in expression of several hormones an...
In prairie voles (Microtus ochrogaster), biparental care of offspring is typical, and paternal absen...
Mammalian paternal care is rare, and often considered synonymous with social monogamy. Numerous hypo...
This article is part of a Special Issue "Parental Care". Paternal care, though rare among mammals, i...
Although considerable data are available on the subject for birds, almost nothing is known about the...
Across the animal kingdom, parents in many species devote extraordinary effort toward caring for off...
Parental care by fathers, although rare among mmmals, can be essential for the survival and normal d...
Biparental care of offspring occurs in diverse mammalian genera, and is particularly common among sp...
Paternal care is uncommon in mammals where males are more often involved in sexual competition for f...
Although cooperation represents a long-standing evolutionary puzzle, field studies on social carnivo...
Biparental care of offspring occurs in diverse mammalian genera and is particularly common among spe...
In the 5-10% of mammals in which both parents routinely provide infant care, fathers as well as moth...
For altricial mammalian species, early life social bonds are constructed principally between offspri...
Maternal behaviour has profound, long-lasting implications for the health and well-being of developi...
In biparental systems, sexual conflict over parental investment predicts that the parent providing c...
Natural variations in parenting are associated with differences in expression of several hormones an...
In prairie voles (Microtus ochrogaster), biparental care of offspring is typical, and paternal absen...
Mammalian paternal care is rare, and often considered synonymous with social monogamy. Numerous hypo...
This article is part of a Special Issue "Parental Care". Paternal care, though rare among mammals, i...
Although considerable data are available on the subject for birds, almost nothing is known about the...
Across the animal kingdom, parents in many species devote extraordinary effort toward caring for off...
Parental care by fathers, although rare among mmmals, can be essential for the survival and normal d...
Biparental care of offspring occurs in diverse mammalian genera, and is particularly common among sp...
Paternal care is uncommon in mammals where males are more often involved in sexual competition for f...
Although cooperation represents a long-standing evolutionary puzzle, field studies on social carnivo...
Biparental care of offspring occurs in diverse mammalian genera and is particularly common among spe...
In the 5-10% of mammals in which both parents routinely provide infant care, fathers as well as moth...
For altricial mammalian species, early life social bonds are constructed principally between offspri...
Maternal behaviour has profound, long-lasting implications for the health and well-being of developi...
In biparental systems, sexual conflict over parental investment predicts that the parent providing c...
Natural variations in parenting are associated with differences in expression of several hormones an...
In prairie voles (Microtus ochrogaster), biparental care of offspring is typical, and paternal absen...