Neonatal antipredator tactics shape female movement patterns in large herbivores
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Date
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Nature Research
Abstract
Caring for newborn offspring hampers resource acquisition of mammalian females, curbing their ability to meet the high energy expenditure of early lactation. Newborns are particularly vulnerable, and, among the large herbivores, ungulates have evolved a continuum of neonatal antipredator tactics, ranging from immobile hider (such as roe deer fawns or impala calves) to highly mobile follower offspring (such as reindeer calves or chamois kids). How these tactics constrain female movements around parturition is unknown, particularly within the current context of increasing habitat fragmentation and earlier plant phenology caused by global warming. Here, using a comparative analysis across 54 populations of 23 species of large herbivores from 5 ungulate families (Bovidae, Cervidae, Equidae, Antilocapridae and Giraffidae), we show that mothers adjust their movements to variation in resource productivity and heterogeneity according to their offspring’s neonatal tactic. Mothers with hider offspring are unable to exploit environments where the variability of resources occurs at a broad scale, which might alter resource allocation compared with mothers with follower offspring. Our findings reveal that the overlooked neonatal tactic plays a key role for predicting how species are coping with environmental variation.
Description
DATA AVAILABILITY : The computer code and data used in this paper are available at https://gitlab.in2p3.fr/christophe.bonenfant/neonatal-tactics.
Keywords
Animal behaviour, Behavioural ecology, Neonatal antipredator tactics, Large herbivores, Fmale movement patterns
Sustainable Development Goals
SDG-15: Life on land
Citation
Atmeh, K., Bonenfant, C., Gaillard, J.M. et al. Neonatal antipredator tactics shape female movement patterns in large herbivores. Nature Ecology & Evolution 9, 142–152 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41559-024-02565-8.
