Mother Deer Cannot Recognize Offspring

Mother Deer Cannot Recognize Offspring Adult female deer are not able to discriminate between calls of their own offspring and other fawns
Credit: Courtesy Marco V.G. Torriani
In a new study from The American Naturalist, scientists from the University of Zurich studied vocal communication between fallow deer mothers and their offspring. They observed that only adult females have individually distinctive calls, meaning that fawns are able to distinguish their mother's calls from those of other females, but mothers are not able to distinguish between the calls of their own offspring and other fawns. This is in contrast to prior studies and provides a novel insight into parent-offspring recognition mechanisms.

"Newborn fawns lie concealed and silent in vegetation away from their mothers to avoid detection by predators, and mothers return intermittently to feed them," write Marco Torriani, Elisabetta Vannoni, and Alan McElligott. "Vocal communication is very important for ungulate hider species because mothers and offspring rely on contact calls for reunions to occur".

The scientists tested vocal recognition on Swiss fallow deer farms using recordings and playback experiments. Similar research on domestic sheep and reindeer has shown that both mothers and offspring are able to recognize each other based on individually distinctive contact calls. However, reindeer and sheep tend to populate open habitats lacking cover, and the scientists argue that the recognition system employed by deer evolved in habitats providing abundant cover for newborns. While sheep and reindeer are mobile soon after birth and thus remain in constant close contact with the mother mother-offspring contact for deer is limited during the first few weeks of life to when nursing occurs.

"Our results show that different environmental conditions influence predator avoidance strategies and also effect the evolution of different parental recognition mechanisms," says McElligott. "This appears to be independent of phylogenesis because eventhough fallow deer and reindeer are more closely related than reindeer and sheep, the mother-offspring recognition system of reindeer and sheep is more similar".



Posted by: Kelly    Source