A TEST OF SEMELPARITY IN THE LONG-TERM POPULATION MONITORING OF THE MARSUPIAL Marmosops incanus (DIDELPHIMORPHIA, DIDELPHIDAE)

Authors

  • Priscilla Lóra Zangrandi
  • Maja Kajin
  • Marcus Vinícius Vieira

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.4257/oeco.2023.2702.05

Keywords:

cohort, life-history strategy, mortality, reproduction, semelparous, survival

Abstract

Semelparity, the life-history strategy characterized by death after first reproduction, is restricted
in mammals to only two marsupial families, Dasyuridae in Australasia and Didelphidae in the Neotropics. Among didelphids, studies suggest a semelparous pattern for mouse opossums of the genus Marmosops. These studies have revealed that both sexes may have low survival rates after reproduction in two distinct Atlantic Forest populations. However, the semelparous strategy, which is usually considered a speciesspecific trait, can also be found in only some populations of Dasyuridae species. Thus, in this study, we aimed to investigate the occurrence of the semelparous life strategy in a population of M. incanus in an Atlantic Forest area of the PARNA Serra dos Órgãos, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, through survival estimates using 13-year capture-mark-recapture data from a long-term population study. We established cohorts, grouping the capture histories of individuals born by the end of the breeding season. We built a global model in which survival and recapture rates vary with time and between sexes, in addition to the interaction between these factors. Model selection and averaged survival estimates were in accordance with the semelparous strategy
for this population of M. incanus, with survival being affected by both sex and time. Even though we found that the survival of females was higher than that of males as expected, the difference was small. Here we confirm that another population of M. incanus displays a semelparous life-history strategy, supporting previous considerations of museums specimens. Nonetheless, the causes and mechanisms of semelparity in didelphid species are still to be understood.

References

ASTÚA DE MORAES, D., R. T. SANTORI, R. FINOTTI, AND R. CERQUEIRA. 2003. Nutritional and fibre contents of laboratory–established diets of neotropical opossums (Didelphidae). Pp. 225–233 in Predators with pouches: the biology of carnivorous marsupials (M. Jones, C. Dickman, and M. Archer, eds.). CSIRO Publishing, Colingwood, Victoria, Australia.

BOONSTRA, R. 2005. Equipped for life: the adaptive role of the stress axis in male mammals. Journal of Mammalogy 86:236–247.

BRADLEY, A. J. 2003. Stress, hormones and mortality in small carnivorous marsupials. Pp. 254–267 in Predators with pouches: the biology of carnivorous marsupials (M. Jones, C. Dickman, and M. Archer, eds.). CSIRO Publishing, Colingwood, Victoria, Australia.

BRAITHWAITE, R. W. AND A. K. LEE. 1979. A mammalian example of semelparity. American Naturalist 113:151–155.

BURNHAM, K. P. AND D. R. ANDERSON. 2002. Model selection and multimodel inference: a practical information–theoretic approach. Springer-Verlag, New York.

CÂMARA, E. M. V. C., L. C. OLIVEIRA AND R. L. MEYER. 2003. Occurence of the mouse opossum Marmosops incanus in Cerrado “strictu sensu” area and new locality records on the Cerrado and Caatinga biomes in Minas Gerais State, Brazil. Mammalia 67:617–619.

CERQUEIRA, R. 2005. Fatores ambientais e a reprodução de marsupiais e roedores no leste do Brasil. Arquivos do Museu Nacional (Rio de Janeiro). 63:29–39.

COOCH, E. G AND G. WHITE. 2007. Program MARK: a gentle introduction, 7ª edição. Acessado em março 2008: http://www.phidot.org/software/mark/docs/book.

CUNHA, A. A. AND M. V. VIEIRA. 2002. Support diameter, incline, and vertical movements of four didelphid marsupials in the Atlantic forest of Brazil. Journal of Zoology (London) 258:419– 426.

GIESEL, J. T. 1976. Reproductive strategies as adaptations to life intemporally heterogeneous environments. Annual Reviews in Ecology and Systematics 7:57–79.

HOLLELEY, C. E., C. R. DICKMAN, M. S. CROWTHER AND B. P. OLDROYD. 2006. Size breeds success: multiple paternity, multivariate selection and male semelparity in a small marsupial, Antechinus stuartii. Molecular Ecology 15:3439–3448.

INTITUTO BRASILEIRO DE GEOGRAFIA E ESTATÍSTICA. 1992. Manual Técnico da Vegetação Brasileira. Série Manuais Técnicos Número 1. Departamento de Recursos Naturais e Estudos Ambientais, Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

INSTITUTO NACIONAL DE METEOROLOGIA. 1979. Normais Climatológicas. 2nd ed. Ministério da Agricultura, Instituto Nacional de Meteorologia, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

JOHNSON, J. B. AND K. S. OMLAND. 2004. Model selection in ecology and evolution. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 19:101–108.

KRAAIJEVELD, K., F. J. L. KRAAIJEVELD–SMIT AND G. J. ADCOCK. 2003. Does female mortality drive male semelparity in dasyurid marsupials? Biological Sciences 270:251–253.

LEBRETON, J.D., K. P. BURNHAM, J. CLOBERT AND D. R. ANDERSON. 1992. Modeling survival and testing biological hypoteses using marked animals: a unified approach with case studies. Ecological Monographs 62(1):67–118.

LEINER, N. O. 2005. Ecologia alimentar e reprodutiva de Marmosops paulensis (Didelphimorfia, Didelphidea) em uma área de Mata Atlântica no sudeste de São Paulo. Ph.D. dissertation, Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Campinas, São Paulo, Brazil.

LEINER, N. O., E. Z. F. SETZ, AND W. R. SILVA. 2008. Semelparity and factors affecting the reproductive activity of the Brazilian slender oppossum (Marmosops paulensis) in Southeastern Brazil. Journal of Mammalogy 89:153–158.

LORETTO, D., M. V. VIEIRA. 2008. Use of space by the marsupial Marmosops incanus (Didelphimorphia, Didelphidae) in the Atlantic Forest, Brazil. Mammalian Biology 73:255–261.

LORINI, M. L., J. A. OLIVEIRA, AND V. G. PERSON. 1994. Annual age structure and reprodutive patterns in Marmosa incana (Lund, 1841) (Didelphidae, Marsupialia). Zeitschrift für Säugetierkunde (Mammalian Biology) 59:65 – 73.

MACEDO, J. 2007. Reprodução, fator de condição e dinâmica temporal de uma população do marsupial didelfídeo Marmosops incanus na Serra dos Órgãos. Ph.D. dissertation, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

MACEDO, J., D. LORETTO, M. C. S. MELLO, M. V. VIEIRA AND R. CERQUEIRA. 2006. Classes de desenvolvimento em marsupiais: um método para animais vivos. Mastozoología Neotropical 13:133–136.

MACEDO, J., D. LORETTO, M. C. S. MELLO, S. R. FREITAS, M.V. VIEIRA AND CERQUEIRA, R. 2007. História Natural dos mamíferos de uma área perturbada do Parque Nacional da Serra dos Órgãos, Rio de Janeiro, Brasil. Pp. 166–181 in Ciência e Conservação da Serra dos Órgãos (C., Cronemberger and E. B. Viveiros de Castro, org.) Ibama: Brasília, Brazil.

MARTINS, E. G., V. BONATO, C. Q. DA–SILVA, AND S. F. DOS REIS. 2006. Partial semelparity in the neotropical didelphid marsupial Gracilinanus microtarsus. Journal of Mammalogy 87:915–920.

MUSTRANGI, M. A. AND J. L. PATTON. 1997. Phylogeography and systematics of the Slender Mouse Opossum Marmosops (Marsupialia, Didelphidae). University of California Publications in Zoology. 130: 1–86.

NIMER, E. 1989. Climatologia do Brasil. Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística, Departamento de Recursos Naturais e Estudos Ambientais, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

OAKWOOD, M., A. J. BRADLEY AND A. COCKBURN. 2001. Semelparity in a large marsupial. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, B. Biological Sciences 268:407–411.

PINE, R. H., P. L. DALBY, AND J. O. MATSON. 1985. Ecology, postnatal development, morphometrics and taxonomic status of the short-tailed opossum, Monodelphis dimidiata, an apparently semelparous annual marsupial. Annals of the Carnegie Museum 54:195–231.

ROSSI, R. V., G. V. BIANCONI, AND W. A. PEDRO. 2006. Ordem Didelphimorphia. Pp. 43–44 in Mamíferos do Brasil (N. R., dos Reis, A. L., Peracchi, W. A. Pedro and I. P. Lima, eds.).UEL, Londrina, Paraná, Brazil.

WALTER, H. 1986. Vegetação e zonas climáticas: tratado de ecologia global. Editora Pedagógica e Universitária, São Paulo, Brazil.

WHITE, G. C. AND K. P. BURNHAM. 1999. Program MARK: survival estimation from populations of marked animals. Bird Study 46:20–138.

WHITE, G. C., K. P. BURNHAM AND D. R. ANDERSON. 2001. Advanced features of Program MARK. Pp. 368–377 in Integrating People and Wildlife for a Sustainable Future (R. Fields, ed.) Proceedings of the Second International Wildlife Management Congress. The Wildlife Society, Bethesda, Maryland.

WOODS, H. A. AND E. C. HELLGREN. 2003. Seasonal changes in the physiology of male Virginia opossums (Didelphis virginiana): signs of dasyurid semelparity syndrome? Physiological and Biochemical Zoology 76:406–417.

Downloads

Additional Files

Published

2023-06-15