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Get Free AccessSummary In most respects, the demography of Kalahari suricates ( Suricata suricatta ) resembles that of other social mongooses. Average group size varies from four to nine, and groups typically include several mature females, of which one is responsible for the majority of breeding attempts. Breeding females show a postpartum oestrus; gestation is around 60 days; litter size is three to five pups at emergence and females rarely breed before the age of 24 months. In contrast, annual survival rates (0.20 for pups and 0.43 for animals over one year old) are lower than those recorded in other species. Breeding frequency is related to rainfall and breeding can cease altogether when rainfall is unusually low. In a year when this occurred, group size eroded rapidly and over 60% of groups became extinct. Total numbers were slow to recover during the following year because emigration by females was infrequent and new groups did not form in vacant ranges created by the extinction of groups. High rates of group extinction have been found in other cooperative breeders and may occur because breeding success and survival show inverse density dependence.
Tim Clutton-brock, Andrew D. C. MacColl, P. R. Chadwick, David Gaynor, Ruth Kansky, J. D. Skinner (1999). Reproduction and survival of suricates (<i>Suricata suricatta</i>) in the southern Kalahari. African Journal of Ecology, 37(1), pp. 69-80, DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2028.1999.00160.x.
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Type
Article
Year
1999
Authors
6
Datasets
0
Total Files
0
Language
English
Journal
African Journal of Ecology
DOI
10.1046/j.1365-2028.1999.00160.x
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