Natural regulation of population size in large mammals by means of two
new delayed density-dependent fertility mechanisms
Abstract
It is generally assumed that population size of all wild animal species
are regulated through density-dependent mechanisms, but the mechanisms
responsible have been difficult to identify for elephants and large
whales. We have used information on physiological reproductive
mechanisms in humans in a stochastic computer simulation study to
explore how known density-dependent fertility mechanisms in humans could
regulate population size in a hypothetical large mammal species,
assuming no deliberate interference with sexual or reproductive
processes. Two physiological reproductive mechanisms in women are
dependent on nutrition in utero or early life: age at menarche and
post-partum amenorrhea during lactation, and were included in the model.
If large female mammals in general have physiological reproductive
mechanisms similar to human females, strong density-dependence
mechanisms will be the result, but with a substantial delay, 20 to 50
years. The model results are discussed in relation to what is known
about populations of the Eastern North Pacific gray whales (Eschrichtius
robustus), Antarctic minke whales (Balaenoptera bonaerensis) and
elephants (Loxodonta africana) in Amboseli National Park, Kenya.