Infanticide occurs in a diversity of taxa and may provide benefits to the perpetrator through nutritional gain, reduced competition, or increased fitness from mating opportunities through sexually selected infanticide (SSI). Infanticide, however, is rarely observed. We documented a probable infanticide event by a 23-year-old adult male polar bear (Ursus maritimus) on a 3-month-old cub in western Hudson Bay, Canada, during the spring of 2023. We subsequently documented a 21-year-old solitary female who was lactating and in breeding condition with swollen labia, suggesting polar bears return to estrous quickly in the absence of cubs. Using the literature, we examined the relationships among polar bear cub-of-the-year, adult male survival, and the ratio of male/female mortality. We suggest SSI as the plausible explanation for the infanticide event observed and discuss how indirect effects from climate change may affect the prevalence of infanticide as a mechanism regulating polar bear populations.
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29 October 2024
Possible sexually selected infanticide by polar bears in western Hudson Bay
David McGeachy,
Nicholas J. Lunn,
Andrew E. Derocher
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Ursus
Vol. 2024 • No. 35e20
October 2024
Vol. 2024 • No. 35e20
October 2024
climate change
Hudson Bay
intraspecific competition
polar bears
sex ratio
sexual selection
sexually selected infanticide