Allosuckling allows growing offspring to compensate for insufficient maternal milk in farmed guanacos (Lama guanicoe)
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Zapata, Beatriz
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Allosuckling allows growing offspring to compensate for insufficient maternal milk in farmed guanacos (Lama guanicoe)
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Abstract
While allonursing, the provision of milk to non-offspring by females, involves a potential
cost to their own offspring, allosuckling, the suckling from females other than their own
mothermay allow offspring to compensate for previous deficiencies in maternal milk. We
tested this hypothesis in farmed guanacos. Under the compensation hypothesis we
predicted that mothers of calves exhibiting allosuckling should be in poorer physical
condition and should exhibit relatively low acceptance rates to filial sucking attempts
compared to mothers whose calf did not allosuckle. We also predicted that calves
exhibiting frequent allosuckling should show similar or greater rates of gain in body
weight, but similar total (or final) weight in the long term than calves that nursed from
their mothers exclusively. We examined the potential effects of sex and order of birth
dates of calves on allosuckling, and the effect of female success during agonistic
encounters with other females on allonursing. Two stable groups of 15 and 14 mother–
offspring pairs of farmed guanacos were studied from birth to approximately 3 months of
age. Allosuckling events comprised 5.7% of all suckling events. Allonursing was performed
by 52% of dams and 62% of calves exhibited allosuckling. We found similar gain rates in
body weight and total weight at 60 days of age between allosuckling calves and filial
sucking calves, irrespective of whether their mothers allonursed or not (P > 0.1). Body
weight of mothers whose calf allosuckled was significantly lower than that of mothers
whose calves nursed from them exclusively (P = 0.02). In addition, the percentage of
acceptance of filial suckling bouts was significantly lower for allosuckling calves
(P = 0.004). There was no correlation between the frequency of allonursing and the
success of dams during agonistic encounters (P > 0.22). Our findings are consistent with
the hypothesis that guanaco calves used allosucking to compensate for previous
deficiencies in maternal milk.
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/122400
DOI: doi:10.1016/j.applanim.2009.12.004
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Applied Animal Behaviour Science 122 (2010) 119–126
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