Skip to main content
Log in

The effect of intrauterine position on the survival, reproduction and home range size of female house mice (Mus musculus)

  • Published:
Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Summary

In laboratory studies using albino house mice, a female's prior intrauterine position can affect many postnatal physiological, morphological and behavioral characteristics. Females flanked by males in utero (2M females) exhibit more aggressive dominance than females flanked by females (OM females). Thus, wild 2M females may be most successful during peak population densities when their aggressive nature would allow them to displace other females from limited resources. 2M and 0M females and males delivered by cesarean section were individually marked and released as young adults on two occasions onto a “highway island” (the area enclosed by exit and entrance ramps at an interchange) to determine whether 2 M females have a competitive advantage over 0 M females in the field. Males were included to create realistic population structure; their intrauterine position was not a treatment. Feeding stations afforded individuals an opportunity to exhibit their dominance by maintaining home-ranges at or near the stations. The populations were monitored by periodic live-trapping and reproductive success was determined using field body weights and by post-mortem examination for uterine implantation scars. Survival and capture rates were estimated, using a modified Jolly-Seber markrecapture program, for each of four intervals between trapping occasions over the course of 7 weeks. There were no overall differences in survivorship between 2M and 0M females, neither type of female was caught more frequently at feeding stations and they did not differ in measures of reproductive success. However, 2M females had significantly larger home-range sizes than 0M females and thus space use may be a trait “masculinized” by prior intrauterine position. Although there are a number of life-history characteristics that differ between 0M and 2M females in the laboratory that we did not test specifically in the field, our findings and other features of wild house mouse biology suggest that prior intrauterine position does not have a strong effect on survival and reproduction in the wild.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Similar content being viewed by others

References

  • Allen TO, Haggett BN (1977) Group housing of pregnant mice reduces copulatory receptivity of female progeny. Physiol Behav 19:61–68

    Google Scholar 

  • Berry RJ, Jakobson ME (1971) Life and death in an island population of the house mouse. J Gerontol 6:187–197

    Google Scholar 

  • Bujalska G (1973) The role of spacing behaviour among females in the regulation of reproduction in the bank vole. J Reprod Fert, Suppl 19:465–474

    Google Scholar 

  • Burnham KP, Anderson DR, White GC, Brownie C, Pollock KH (1987) Design and analysis methods for fish survival experiments based on release-recapture. Am Fish Soc Monogr 5. Bethesda

  • Carpenter FL (1987) Food abundance and territoriality: to defend or not to defend? Am Zool 27:387–400

    Google Scholar 

  • Clark M, Galef B (1988) Effects of uterine position on rate of sexual development in female Mongolian gerbils. Physiol Behav 42:15–18

    Google Scholar 

  • Clemens L, Gladue B, Coniglio L (1978) Prenatal endogenous androgenic influences on masculine sexual behavior and genital morphology in male and female rats. Horm Behav 10:40–53

    Google Scholar 

  • Coppola DM (1986) Reproductive status and the assimilation of introduced females into a wild population of house mice. Acta Ther 31:221–237

    Google Scholar 

  • Coppola DM, Vandenbergh JG (1987) Induction of a pubery-regulating chemosignal in wild mouse populations. J Mammal 68:86–91

    Google Scholar 

  • Davis DE, Emlen JT Jr (1948) The placental scar as a measure of fertility. J Wildl Manage 12:162–166

    Google Scholar 

  • DeLong KT (1967) Population ecology of feral house mice. Ecology 48:611–634

    Google Scholar 

  • Gupta C, Goldman AS (1986) The arachidonic acid cascade is involved in the masculinizing action of testosterone on embryonic external genitalia in mice. Proc Natl Acad Sci 83:4346–4349

    Google Scholar 

  • Harestad AS, Bunnell FL (1979) Home range and body weight-a reevaluation. Ecology 60:389–402

    Google Scholar 

  • Houtsmuller EJ, Slob AK (1990) Masculinization and defeminization of female rats by males located caudally in the uterus. Physiol Behav 48:555–560]

    Google Scholar 

  • Ims RA (1987) Determinants of competitive success in Clethrionomys rufocanus. Ecology 68:1812–1818

    Google Scholar 

  • Ims RA (1988) Spatial clumping of sexually receptive females induces space sharing among male voles. Nature 335:541–543

    Google Scholar 

  • Ims RA (1990) Determinants of natal dispersal and space use in grey-sided voles, Clethrionomys rufocanus: a combined field and laboratory experiment. Oikos 57:106–113

    Google Scholar 

  • Jolly GM (1965) Explicit estimates from capture-recapture data with both death and immigration-stochastic model. Biometrika 52:225–247

    Google Scholar 

  • Keever C (1950) Causes of succession on old-fields of the Piedmont, North Carolina. Ecol Monogr 20:229–250

    Google Scholar 

  • Kirkpatrick RL (1980) Physiological indices in wildlife management. In: Schemnitz SD (ed) Wildlife management techniques manual. The Wildlife Society, Washington DC, pp 99–112

    Google Scholar 

  • Krementz DG, Nichols JD, Hines JE (1989) Postfledging survival of European starlings. Ecology 70:646–655

    Google Scholar 

  • Lidicker WZ (1966) Ecological observations on a feral house mouse population declining to extinction. Ecol Monogr 36:27–50

    Google Scholar 

  • Massey A (1982) Ecology of house mouse populations confined by highways. J Elisha Mitchell Sci Soc 98:135–143

    Google Scholar 

  • Massey A, Vandenbergh JG (1980) Puberty delay by a urinary cue from female mice in feral populations. Science 209:821–822

    Google Scholar 

  • Meisel R, Ward I (1981) Fetal female rats are masculinized by male littermates located caudally in the uterus. Science 213:239–242

    Google Scholar 

  • Ostfeld RS (1986) Territoriality and mating system of California voles. J Anim Ecol 55:691–706

    Google Scholar 

  • Perrigo G, Bronson FH (1985) Behavioral and physiological responses of female house mice to foraging variation. Physiol Behav 34:437–440

    Google Scholar 

  • Politch J, Herrenkohl L (1984) Effects of prenatal stress on reproduction in male and female mice. Physiol Behav 32:95–99

    Google Scholar 

  • Rines JP, vom Saal FS (1984) Fetal effects on sexual behavior and aggression in young and old female mice treated with estrogen and progesterone. Horm Behav 18:117–129

    Google Scholar 

  • Rowe FP, Taylor EJ, Chudley AHJ (1963) The effect of crowding on the reproduction of the house-mouse (Mus musculus L.) living in corn-ricks. J Anim Ecol 33:477–483

    Google Scholar 

  • Rugh R (1968) The mouse: Its reproduction and development. Burgess, Minneapolis

    Google Scholar 

  • Salvioni M (1988) Home range and social behavior of three species of European Pitymys (Mammalia, Rodentia). Behav Ecol Sociobiol 22:203–210

    Google Scholar 

  • Scher GAF (1965) A note on the multiple-recapture census. Biometrika 52:254–259

    Google Scholar 

  • Smith WW (1954) Reproduction in the house mouse, Mus musculus L., in Mississippi. J Mammal 35:509–515

    Google Scholar 

  • Southwick CH (1958) Population characteristics of house mice living in English earn ticks: density relationships. Proc Zool Soc London 131:163–175

    Google Scholar 

  • Stueck KL, Barrett GW (1978) Effects of resource partitioning on the population dynamics and energy utilization strategies of feral house mice (Mus musculus) populations under experimental field conditions. Ecology 59:539–551

    Google Scholar 

  • Stüwe M, Blohowiak CE (1982) Microcomputer programs for the analysis of animal locations (MCPAAL). Conservation and Research Center, Nat Zool Park, Smithsonian Inst. Unpub Mimeo

  • Vomachka A, Lisk R (1986) Androgen and estrogen levels in plasma and amniotic fluid of lat gestational male and female hamsters: Uterine position effects. Horm Behav 20:181–193

    Google Scholar 

  • vom Saul F (1981) Variation in phenotype due to random intrauterine positioning of male and female fetuses in rodents. J Reprod Fertil 62:633–650

    Google Scholar 

  • vom Saul F (1984) The intrauterine position phenomenon: effects on physiology, aggressive behavior, and population dynamics in house mice. In: Flannely K, Blanchard R, Blanchard D (eds) Biological Perspectives on Aggression. Alan Liss Inc, New York, pp 135–179

    Google Scholar 

  • vom Saul F (1989) Sexual differentiation in litter-bearing mammals: Influence of sex of adjacent fetuses in utero. J Anim Sci 67:1824–1840

    Google Scholar 

  • vom Saal F, Bronson F (1978) In utero proximity of female house mouse fetuses to males: Effect on reproductive performance during later life. Biol Reprod 19:842–853

    Google Scholar 

  • vom Saal F, Bronson F (1980) Sexual characteristics of adult female mice are correlated with their blood testosterone levels during prenatal development. Science 208:597–599

    Google Scholar 

  • vom Saal F, Moyer C (1985) Prenatal effects on reproductive capacity during aging in female mice. Biol Reprod 32:1116

    Google Scholar 

  • vom Saal F, Dhar M, Even M (1989) Uterine blood flow, intrauterine transport of steroids, and the intrauterine position phenomenon in rats. Abstract. Conf of Reprod Behav Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs, N.Y., p. 21

  • vom Saal F, Quadagno DM, Even MD, Keisler LW, Keisler DH, Khan S (1990) Paradoxical effects of maternal stress on fetal steroids and postnatal reproductive traits in female mice from different intrauterine positions. Biol Reprod 43:751–761

    Google Scholar 

  • Ward IL, Weisz J (1980) Maternal stress alters plasma testosterone in fetal males. Science 207:328–329

    Google Scholar 

  • Zielinski WJ, Vandenbergh JG (1991) The effect of intrauterine position and social density on age of first reproduction in wildtype female house mice (Mus musculus). J Comp Psych 105:134–139

    Google Scholar 

  • Zielinski WJ, Vandenbergh JG (1991) Increased survivorship of testosterone-treated female house mice (Mus musculus) in high-density field conditions. Anim Behav 42:955–967

    Google Scholar 

  • Zielinski WJ, Vandenbergh JG, Montano MM (1991) Effects of social stress and intrauterine position on sexual phenotype in wild-type house mice (Mus musculus). Physiol Behav 49:117–123

    Google Scholar 

Download references

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Additional information

Offprint requests to: W.J. Zielinski at the present address

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article

Zielinski, W.J., vom Saal, F.S. & Vandenbergh, J.G. The effect of intrauterine position on the survival, reproduction and home range size of female house mice (Mus musculus). Behav Ecol Sociobiol 30, 185–191 (1992). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00166702

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Accepted:

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00166702

Keywords

Navigation