Analyses of factors influencing the birth weight and neonatal growth rate of Cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus) cubs

Publication Type:
Journal Article
Year of Publication:
1999
Authors:
Sylvie P. A. Beekman, Bas Kemp, Hanneke C. M. Louwman, Ben Colenbrander
Publication/Journal:
Zoo Biology
Publisher:
Inc., John Wiley & Sons
Keywords:
, ,
ISBN:
1098-2361
Abstract:

Abstract 10.1002/(SICI)1098-2361(1999)18:2<129::AID-ZOO4>3.3.CO;2-0 Birth weight and the neonatal growth rate are reliable indicators of neonatal survival prospects. Data on weight at birth and consecutive weights until 40 days of age were recorded for cheetah cubs in 16 litters. Growth was found to be linear during the first 40 days of life. Weight data were used to evaluate the influence of several factors on birth weight and neonatal growth. The factors used in these analyses were sex, litter identity, litter size, average litter size over the first 40 days, birth weight, parents, gestation length, parity of the dam, and inbreeding. For birth weight and neonatal growth, litter identity was the major explanatory factor (81.8 and 85.3%). For birth weight, a significant influence of gestation length was found (p < 0.05), whereas inbreeding coefficient tended to decrease the birth weight (p = 0.09). Together, gestation length and inbreeding coefficient account for 57.5% of the between-litter variation for birth weight. Factors with significant influences on neonatal growth are gestation length and parity (p < 0.05). The average litter size over the first 40 days tended to influence neonatal growth (p = 0.07). These three variables together account for 99.9% of the between-litter variation for neonatal growth during the first 40 days of life. A comparison of neonatal growth between mother-raised and hand-raised cubs revealed a lower growth rate in hand-raised cubs (45 vs. 27 g/day). Zoo Biol 18:129–139, 1999. © 1999 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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