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1 May 2012 Body condition and growth dynamics of American black bears in northern Canada
Tad M. Bartareau, Nicholas C. Larter, H. Dean Cluff, Erin H. Leone
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Abstract

We examined body condition and growth dynamics of wild American black bears (Ursus americanus) inhabiting interior regions of northern Canada, 1998–2009. Differences in body condition were unrelated to gender, but we found significant effects of age and season as well as an interaction between the two. We found a trend toward improved body condition in older bears that increased during summer and peaked in fall, with lowest values observed in spring. The von Bertalanffy growth function showed that males reached asymptotic body length 9.3% longer, and mass 29.3% heavier, than females. Our growth models indicated an association between sexual growth divergence and the onset of reproduction in females, together with more rapid and prolonged male growth. We suggest that sexual size dimorphism develops in part from constraints on female growth from high energetic costs of reproduction. In contrast, males experience no comparable energetic trade-off after reaching sexual maturity and apparently allocate available energetic resources to growth of larger body size, which benefits more competitive males in terms of increased reproductive success.

Tad M. Bartareau, Nicholas C. Larter, H. Dean Cluff, and Erin H. Leone "Body condition and growth dynamics of American black bears in northern Canada," Ursus 23(1), 12-20, (1 May 2012). https://doi.org/10.2192/URSUS-D-11-00003.1
Received: 30 March 2011; Accepted: 1 December 2011; Published: 1 May 2012
KEYWORDS
body condition index
growth function
Northwest Territories
Ursus americanus
von Bertalanffy
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