Twenty-five years ago, brown bear mothers in Sweden rarely spent more than 18 months raising their cubs. Today, it’s not unusual for moms to devote 2½ years to their cubs before they go off on their own.
What’s behind this new passion for parenting? Researchers attribute it to a hunting regulation that protects mother bears and their cubs.
Detailed data on brown bears living in Swedish forests show that when moms feel under the gun, their best survival strategy is to have as many cubs as possible — which means weaning their young quickly.
However, when they don’t feel pressured by hunters, they respond by investing more time and resources in their offspring. That gives the cubs a better chance of survival when they finally do make their own way in the world.
The results surprised researchers, who predicted that the mother bears would try to have as many cubs as they could.
“We expected that shorter periods of maternal care would be more advantageous, because it provides females with more reproductive opportunities and because the energetic costs associated with maternal care are high in mammals,” the researchers wrote in a study published on Tuesday in the journal Nature Communications.
Scientists have been observing this population of Scandinavian brown bears since at least 1987, keeping track of as many individual animals as they could. The bears in this forest of Scots pine and Norway spruce trees are “heavily hunted” between late August and mid-October (though the hunting season can end earlier if the quota has been met).
The regulation at the heart of the study prevents hunters from killing adult female bears that are seen with their dependent cubs. That means that the more time moms and cubs spend together, the longer they are protected from hunters.
This survival strategy became more common over time. In the first decade after the pioneering family was found, litters with longer childhoods were seen only every other year. But since 2005, at least one such litter was found every year. In 2009 and 2010, more than two-thirds of observed litters were raised this way, though that level of popularity didn’t last.
The results show that humans can shape wildlife species not only by killing animals but by deciding not to kill them, the researchers wrote.
