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Contest competition and injury in adult male sub-Antarctic fur seals
Bester, Marthan Nieuwoudt; Rossouw, G.J.; Van Staden, Paul Jacobus
We recorded intra-sexual behaviour of adult male sub-Antarctic fur seals Arctocephalus tropicalis at Gough Island, Southern
Ocean, during the 1975/76 summer breeding season. Our re-analysed data address male ‘contest competition’, which relates
to the costs of intra-sexual disputes, including fights. We considered the risks/benefits of fighting through investigation of
injuries (n = 353) sustained by adult males (n = 124) in fights. Injuries were predominantly on the forequarters, especially
around the insertion areas of the front flippers (41%) with its sparse pelage, compared to the neck and chest areas combined
(29%), an area which is well protected by thick pelage. The infliction of serious, sometimes debilitating, injuries to competitors
increases a male’s access to females. Injuries predominate in injured, defeated males that gather at non-breeding sites,
suggesting that injuries inflicted by dominant males were successful in excluding competing males from breeding sites.
Description:
DATA AVAILABILITY : All data generated and analysed during this study
are included in this published article and its supplementary information
files.