Male Marsupials Sacrifice Sleep for Mating, Study Finds
In a unique display among land-dwelling mammals, male antechinuses reduce their sleep hours to maximize reproductive activities during their brief mating season, leading to their eventual death.
- Male antechinuses, small Australian marsupials, sacrifice hours of sleep during their mating season to maximize their reproductive activities, according to a study by researchers at La Trobe University in Melbourne, Australia.
- The study is the first to show direct evidence of this type of sleep restriction in any land-dwelling mammal.
- During the three-week breeding period, males sleep an average of only 12 hours a day, three hours less than their usual sleep time.
- Despite the sleep deprivation, the antechinus maintain their pursuit of mates, participating in marathon mating sessions lasting up to 14 hours.
- After the intense mating season, male antechinuses die off in a mass event, a phenomenon known as 'mating syndrome'.