Reproduction can lead to a trade-off with growth, particularly when individuals reproduce before completing body growth. Kangaroos have indeterminate growth and may always face this trade-off. We combined an experimental manipulation of reproductive effort and multi-year monitoring of a large sample size of marked individuals in two populations of eastern grey kangaroos to test the predictions (1) that reproduction decreases skeletal growth and mass gain and (2) that mass loss leads to reproductive failure. We also tested if sex-allocation strategies influenced these trade-offs. Experimental reproductive suppression revealed negative effects of reproduction on mass gain and leg growth from 1 year to the next. Unmanipulated females, however,...
The environment an animal inhabits directs the inheritance of traits that improve fitness, with gene...
Progressive body‐size dwarfing of animal populations is predicted under chronic mortality stress, su...
In polygynous species, male reproductive success is predicted to be monopolized by a few dominant ma...
10.1093/beheco/arv209Allocation of resources to current reproduction may reduce future reproduction,...
1. When resources are scarce, female mammals should face a trade-off between lactation and other lif...
When the fitness costs and benefits of sons and daughters differ, offspring sex ratio manipulation c...
When sons and daughters have different fitness costs and benefits, selection may favor deviations fr...
Males may use tactics before, during and after mating to increase their reproductive success. With f...
In sexually dimorphic ungulates, sexual segregation is hypothesized to have evolved because of sex-s...
The degree to which females allocate resources between current reproduction, future fecundity and su...
Abstract: Close behavioural association between mothers and offspring should enhance survival and gr...
Sexual segregation is best known in sexually dimorphic ungulates. Many hypotheses have been proposed...
Macropods exhibit the second largest sexual dimorphism in body size for any vertebrate, suggesting t...
Bilton AD and Croft DB, 2004. Lifetime reproductive success in a population of female red kangaroos ...
Wildlife harvesting has a long history in Australia, including obvious examples of overexploitation....
The environment an animal inhabits directs the inheritance of traits that improve fitness, with gene...
Progressive body‐size dwarfing of animal populations is predicted under chronic mortality stress, su...
In polygynous species, male reproductive success is predicted to be monopolized by a few dominant ma...
10.1093/beheco/arv209Allocation of resources to current reproduction may reduce future reproduction,...
1. When resources are scarce, female mammals should face a trade-off between lactation and other lif...
When the fitness costs and benefits of sons and daughters differ, offspring sex ratio manipulation c...
When sons and daughters have different fitness costs and benefits, selection may favor deviations fr...
Males may use tactics before, during and after mating to increase their reproductive success. With f...
In sexually dimorphic ungulates, sexual segregation is hypothesized to have evolved because of sex-s...
The degree to which females allocate resources between current reproduction, future fecundity and su...
Abstract: Close behavioural association between mothers and offspring should enhance survival and gr...
Sexual segregation is best known in sexually dimorphic ungulates. Many hypotheses have been proposed...
Macropods exhibit the second largest sexual dimorphism in body size for any vertebrate, suggesting t...
Bilton AD and Croft DB, 2004. Lifetime reproductive success in a population of female red kangaroos ...
Wildlife harvesting has a long history in Australia, including obvious examples of overexploitation....
The environment an animal inhabits directs the inheritance of traits that improve fitness, with gene...
Progressive body‐size dwarfing of animal populations is predicted under chronic mortality stress, su...
In polygynous species, male reproductive success is predicted to be monopolized by a few dominant ma...