Direct male parental care observed in wild sugar gliders
Ross L. GoldingaySchool of Environmental Science & Management, Southern Cross University, PO Box 157, Lismore, NSW 2480, Australia. Email:ross.goldingay@scu.edu.au
Australian Mammalogy 32(2) 177-178 https://doi.org/10.1071/AM10009
Submitted: 6 March 2010 Accepted: 25 May 2010 Published: 15 September 2010
Abstract
Observations were made of a pair of wild sugar gliders (Petaurus breviceps) occupying a nest box. When the two young of this pair were ~65 days old, the adult male remained with them within the nest box for at least the first three hours of the night on consecutive nights. This is consistent with the hypothesis that, whilst the mother forages, care from other family members is required to prevent the young becoming hypothermic. This provides the first field evidence of direct male parental care in this species.
Beyer, G. L. , and Goldingay, R. L. (2006). The value of nest boxes in the research and management of Australian hollow-using arboreal marsupials. Wildlife Research33, 161–174.
| Crossref |GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Goldingay, R. L. , and Stevens, J. L. (2009). Use of artificial tree hollows by Australian birds and bats. Wildlife Research36, 81–97.
| Crossref |GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Holloway, J. C. , and Geiser, F. (2000). Development of thermoregulation in the sugar gliderPetaurus breviceps (Marsupialia: Petauridae). Journal of Zoology252, 389–397.
| Crossref |GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
Klettenheimer, B. S. , Temple-Smith, P. D. , and Sofronidis, G. (1997). Father and son sugar gliders: more than a genetic coalition? Journal of Zoology242, 741–750.
| Crossref |GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

Lindenmayer, D. B. , Welsh, A. , and Donnelly, C. F. (1997). Use of nest trees by the mountain brushtail possum (Trichosurus caninus) (Phalangeridae: Marsupialia). III. Spatial configuration and co-occupancy of nest trees. Wildlife Research24, 661–677.
| Crossref |GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

Martin, J. K. , Handasyde, K. A. , Taylor, A. C. , and Coulson, G. (2007). Long-term pair-bonds without mating fidelity in a mammal. Behaviour144, 1419–1445.
| Crossref |GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

Runcie, M. J. (2000). Biparental care and obligate monogamy in the rock-haunting possum,Petropseudes dahli, from tropical Australia. Animal Behaviour59, 1001–1008.
| Crossref |GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |PubMed |

Sadler, L. M. , and Ward, S. J. (1999). Coalitions in male sugar gliders: are they natural? Journal of Zoology248, 91–96.
| Crossref |GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

Smith, M. J. (1971). Breeding the sugar gliderPetaurus breviceps in captivity and growth of pouch young. International Zoo Yearbook11, 26–28.
| Crossref |GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

Smith, M. J. (1979). Observations on growth ofPetaurus breviceps andP. norfolcensis (Petauridae: Marsupialia) in captivity. Australian Wildlife Research6, 141–150.
| Crossref |GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

Tardif, S. D. (1994). Relative energetic cost of infant care in small-bodied neotropical primates and its relation to infant-care patterns. American Journal of Primatology34, 133–143.
| Crossref |GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

Thomson, J. A. , and Owen, W. H. (1964). A field study of the Australian ringtail possumPseudocheirus peregrinus (Marsupialia, Phalangeridae). Ecological Monographs34, 27–52.
| Crossref |GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |
