Female reproduction bears no survival cost in captivity for gray mouse lemurs

Ecol Evol. 2019 May 18;9(11):6189-6198. doi: 10.1002/ece3.5124. eCollection 2019 Jun.

Abstract

The survival cost of reproduction has been revealed in many free-ranging vertebrates. However, recent studies on captive populations failed to detect this cost. Theoretically, this lack of survival/reproduction trade-off is expected when resources are not limiting, but these studies may have failed to detect the cost, as they may not have fully accounted for potential confounding effects, in particular interindividual heterogeneity. Here, we investigated the effects of current and past reproductive effort on later survival in captive females of a small primate, the gray mouse lemur. Survival analyses showed no cost of reproduction in females; and the pattern was even in the opposite direction: the higher the reproductive effort, the higher the chances of survival until the next reproductive event. These conclusions hold even while accounting for interindividual heterogeneity. In agreement with aforementioned studies on captive vertebrates, these results remind us that reproduction is expected to be traded against body maintenance and the survival prospect only when resources are so limiting that they induce an allocation trade-off. Thus, the cost of reproduction has a major extrinsic component driven by environmental conditions.

Keywords: cost of reproduction; environmental conditions; interindividual heterogeneity; mortality hazard; resources allocation; survival.

Associated data

  • Dryad/10.5061/dryad.g860c9s