Understanding mammary activity in red-rumped agouti and implications for management and conservation of this Neotropical game species

Abstract The red-rumped agouti (Dasyprocta leporina) produces precocial young and is the most hunted and farmed game species in several Neotropical countries. An understanding of the reproductive biology, including the relationship between litter size and teat functionality is crucial for conservati...

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Main Authors: M. D. Singh, S. Singh, G. W. Garcia
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Instituto Internacional de Ecologia 2017-11-01
Series:Brazilian Journal of Biology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1519-69842017005116105&lng=en&tlng=en
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spelling doaj-d5bb1a5758554bfb89c485c540b153b82020-11-24T22:54:36ZengInstituto Internacional de EcologiaBrazilian Journal of Biology1678-43752017-11-01010.1590/1519-6984.172814S1519-69842017005116105Understanding mammary activity in red-rumped agouti and implications for management and conservation of this Neotropical game speciesM. D. SinghS. SinghG. W. GarciaAbstract The red-rumped agouti (Dasyprocta leporina) produces precocial young and is the most hunted and farmed game species in several Neotropical countries. An understanding of the reproductive biology, including the relationship between litter size and teat functionality is crucial for conservation management of this animal. In precocial mammals, as the red-rumped agouti, maintaining maternal contact to learn foraging patterns may be more important than the energy demands and nutritional constraints during lactation and suckling may not play important roles when compared to altricial mammals. Therefore, in this study we evaluated the relationship between mammary functionality with litter size, litter birth weight, and parturition number in captive red-rumped agouti. Functionality was assessed by manual palpation of teats from un-sedated females (N=43). We compared the average birth weight of all newborns, male newborns and female newborns among agoutis with different litter sizes and different parturitions by one way ANOVA’s, while Pearson’s Chi-squared tests were used to detect relationships between teat functionality, litter size, and parturition number. Parturition number had no effect on the mean birth weight of all young (F0.822, P > 0.05), male young (F0.80, P > 0.05) or female young (F0.66, P > 0.05) in the litters. We found (i) no significant correlations (P > 0.05) between teat functionality and litter size and (ii) no significant correlations (P > 0.05) between teat functionality and parturition number. This suggests that whilst all teat pairs were functional, functionality was a poor indicator of litter size; suggesting that female agouti young may not have a high dependency on maternal nutrition; an possible evolutionary strategy resulting in large wild populations; hence its popularity as a game species.http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1519-69842017005116105&lng=en&tlng=enanimal reproductionagoutiDasyprocta leporinateat functionalityweaning age
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author M. D. Singh
S. Singh
G. W. Garcia
spellingShingle M. D. Singh
S. Singh
G. W. Garcia
Understanding mammary activity in red-rumped agouti and implications for management and conservation of this Neotropical game species
Brazilian Journal of Biology
animal reproduction
agouti
Dasyprocta leporina
teat functionality
weaning age
author_facet M. D. Singh
S. Singh
G. W. Garcia
author_sort M. D. Singh
title Understanding mammary activity in red-rumped agouti and implications for management and conservation of this Neotropical game species
title_short Understanding mammary activity in red-rumped agouti and implications for management and conservation of this Neotropical game species
title_full Understanding mammary activity in red-rumped agouti and implications for management and conservation of this Neotropical game species
title_fullStr Understanding mammary activity in red-rumped agouti and implications for management and conservation of this Neotropical game species
title_full_unstemmed Understanding mammary activity in red-rumped agouti and implications for management and conservation of this Neotropical game species
title_sort understanding mammary activity in red-rumped agouti and implications for management and conservation of this neotropical game species
publisher Instituto Internacional de Ecologia
series Brazilian Journal of Biology
issn 1678-4375
publishDate 2017-11-01
description Abstract The red-rumped agouti (Dasyprocta leporina) produces precocial young and is the most hunted and farmed game species in several Neotropical countries. An understanding of the reproductive biology, including the relationship between litter size and teat functionality is crucial for conservation management of this animal. In precocial mammals, as the red-rumped agouti, maintaining maternal contact to learn foraging patterns may be more important than the energy demands and nutritional constraints during lactation and suckling may not play important roles when compared to altricial mammals. Therefore, in this study we evaluated the relationship between mammary functionality with litter size, litter birth weight, and parturition number in captive red-rumped agouti. Functionality was assessed by manual palpation of teats from un-sedated females (N=43). We compared the average birth weight of all newborns, male newborns and female newborns among agoutis with different litter sizes and different parturitions by one way ANOVA’s, while Pearson’s Chi-squared tests were used to detect relationships between teat functionality, litter size, and parturition number. Parturition number had no effect on the mean birth weight of all young (F0.822, P > 0.05), male young (F0.80, P > 0.05) or female young (F0.66, P > 0.05) in the litters. We found (i) no significant correlations (P > 0.05) between teat functionality and litter size and (ii) no significant correlations (P > 0.05) between teat functionality and parturition number. This suggests that whilst all teat pairs were functional, functionality was a poor indicator of litter size; suggesting that female agouti young may not have a high dependency on maternal nutrition; an possible evolutionary strategy resulting in large wild populations; hence its popularity as a game species.
topic animal reproduction
agouti
Dasyprocta leporina
teat functionality
weaning age
url http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1519-69842017005116105&lng=en&tlng=en
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