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Is incest common in gray wolf packs?

January 1, 1997

Wolf packs generally consist of a breeding pair and their maturing offspring that help provision and protect pack young. Because the reproductive tenure in wolves is often short, reproductively mature offspring might replace their parents, resulting in sibling or parent-offspring matings. To determine the extent of incestuous pairings, we measured relatedness based on variability in 20 microsatellite loci of mated pairs, parent-offspring pairs, and siblings in two populations of gray wolves. Our 16 sampled mated pairs had values of relatedness not overlapping those of known parent-offspring or sibling dyads, which is consistent with their being unrelated or distantly related. These results suggest that full siblings or a parent and its offspring rarely mate and that incest avoidance is an important constraint on gray wolf behavioral ecology.

Publication Year 1997
Title Is incest common in gray wolf packs?
DOI 10.1093/beheco/8.4.384
Authors Deborah E. Smith, Thomas J. Meier, Eli Geffen, L. David Mech, John W. Burch, Layne G. Adams, Robert K. Wayne
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Behavioral Ecology
Index ID 5223836
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Patuxent Wildlife Research Center