Seasonal body mass dynamics mediate life-history trade-offs in a hibernating mammal

Journal of Animal Ecology
By: , and 

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Abstract

1. Energetic acquisition and growth are key traits that affect demography and life-history strategies. Many animals that live in seasonal environments in which food availability fluctuates store energy endogenously as fat in anticipation of food shortage. Fat-storing mammalian hibernators are an extreme example of this strategy where the optimal resolution of resource allocation trade-offs is essential to survival. Hence, these species provide an opportunity to test potential causes and consequences of seasonal body mass dynamics.

2. We used a 12-year dataset with 8753 body mass records from 3351 individually marked northern Idaho ground squirrels (Urocitellus brunneus) – a federally threatened hibernator – to meet three objectives: (1) document seasonal body mass changes by sex, age, and reproductive status, (2) test ecological hypotheses to explain spatiotemporal variation in body mass, and (3) document fitness consequences of pre-hibernation body condition via condition-dependent overwinter survival.

3. Squirrels varied substantially in seasonal body mass dynamics. The magnitude (36-155%) and onset (late May to early July) of rapid active-season mass gain varied among demographic groups. Reproductive females acquired the necessary fat stores to survive hibernation later in the active season than did males and non-reproductive females. Moreover, squirrels with better pre-hibernation body condition were more likely to survive to the subsequent year, potentially because they allocated excess energetic reserves to prolonging hibernation via early immergence and thereby reduced predation risk. These results suggest a direct trade-off between current and future reproduction mediated by resource acquisition and allocation, as predicted by life-history theory.

4. Colder active-season temperatures and lower conspecific densities negatively influenced squirrel body condition, possibly via reductions in foraging activity associated with those conditions. These ecological effects on body condition constrain resource allocation and demographic outcomes. As such, our results can help guide research and conservation strategies to benefit hibernating animals.

Suggested Citation

Allison, A.Z., Conway, C.J., Goldberg, A.R., Morris, A.E., Hakanson, E.C., 2025, Seasonal body mass dynamics mediate life-history trade-offs in a hibernating mammal: Journal of Animal Ecology, 14 p., https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2656.70160.

Study Area

Publication type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Title Seasonal body mass dynamics mediate life-history trade-offs in a hibernating mammal
Series title Journal of Animal Ecology
DOI 10.1111/1365-2656.70160
Edition Online First
Publication Date October 18, 2025
Year Published 2025
Language English
Publisher British Ecological Society
Contributing office(s) Coop Res Unit Seattle
Description 14 p.
Country United States
State Idaho
Other Geospatial northern Idaho
Additional publication details