## Abstract Energy budgets have proven to be a valuable tool for predicting life history from physiological data in terrestrial vertebrates, yet these concepts have not been applied to the physiological effects of contaminants. Contaminants might affect energy budgets by imposing an additional meta
The effects of mating on infanticide and pup discrimination in white-footed mice
β Scribed by Donna M. Cicirello; Jerry O. Wolff
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1990
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 507 KB
- Volume
- 26
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0340-5443
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
A laboratory study was conducted with whitefooted mice (Peromyscus leucopus) to determine (1) if cohabitation and/or successful mating inhibits infanticide, and if so for how long, and (2) if males and females can discriminate between their own (familiar) and strange (unfamiliar) pups. Infanticidal males and females that were paired for 15 days and did not reproduce were not inhibited from killing pups, whereas infanticidal males and females that were paired until they reproduced were inhibited from committing infanticide at 4 days postpartum. Neither males nor females discriminated between familiar and unfamiliar pups with regard to engaging in infanticide. Approximately 50% of wildcaught males and females killed pups in the laboratory. Infanticidal pairs bred significantly sooner than did noninfanticidal pairs. The results are consistent with the promiscuous nature of P. leucopus males and territoriality of P. leucopus females.
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## Abstract Quantitative comparison of pinealocyte ultrastructure in 3βmonthβold and 28βmonthβold male whiteβfooted mice (__Peromyscus leucopus__) revealed decreases both in the area of the Golgi apparatus and in the number of denseβcore vesicles. In contrast, no differences between these two age g