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Heavy Youngsters—Habitat and Climate Factors Lead to a Significant Increase in Body Weight of Wild Boar Females

Friederike Gethöffer, Oliver Keuling, Claudia Maistrelli, Tobias Ludwig, Ursula Siebert

2023Animals12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

) populations prove highly adaptable to cultivated landscapes. The ongoing process of climate change and the high agricultural yields seem to further optimize the living conditions for this species. In long-term reproduction monitoring, we collected data on the body weight of wild boar females. Over an 18-year period, the body weight of wild boar females increased continuously, then stopped and decreased. It was possible to detect differences between the body weights of animals from forest and agricultural areas. For these areas, differences in body weight development also led to a significant distinction in the onset of puberty. We conclude that, even in a highly cultivated landscape, forested areas provide habitat characteristics that may strongly influence reproduction. Second, with dominant agricultural areas in Germany, wild boar reproduction has been favored in recent decades.

Topics & Concepts

Wild boarBOARHabitatReproductionAgricultureBiologyBody weightEcologyReproductive successZoologyDemographyBotanyPopulationSpermSociologyEndocrinologyWildlife Ecology and ConservationReproductive Physiology in LivestockGenetic and phenotypic traits in livestock
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