Journal article

Population density and movement data for predicting mating systems of arboreal marsupials

MA McCarthy, DB Lindenmayer

Ecological Modelling | ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV | Published : 1998

Abstract

A model, based on the number of encounters between male and female arboreal marsupials, was used to predict the rate of polygyny (the proportion of males fathering offspring with more than one female). The model predicted that the rate of polygyny would increase to an asymptote as population density increased. This result formalises previous suggestions that mating systems of arboreal marsupials may change with population density. Data on movements derived from radio telemetry and trap-recapture methods were used to predict the rate of polygyny in a population of the mountain brushtail possum (Trichosurus caninus) at Cambarville, Victoria, southeastern Australia. The model predicted that 26%..

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University of Melbourne Researchers