Previously, we observed a strong correlation between immunity parameters of neonatal white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) fawns and probability of survival in an overpopulated herd. As a result, we monitored age-related changes in neonatal fawn physiology, with an emphasis on measures of passive immune transfer, to test the hypothesis that maternal protein malnutrition adversely influences the vigor and immunocompetence of newborn fawns. Body mass and physiological data were collected from 55 neonatal fawns (1–28 days old) born to captive does on either a high-protein (16%) or low-protein (6.5%) diet during the latter half of gestation through lactation (15 March – 1 September). The study was conducted over two breeding seasons (1992 and 1993), with does receiving the same diet the second year to assess diet × year interactions. We found little evidence of compromised immunocompetence of neonatal fawns born to protein-malnourished does in either year. The absence of any sign of suppressed in utero development suggested that the nutritional deficiencies of the diet regime we used may not have been chronic enough to mirror conditions that exist in the wild. Birth mass, hematology, and serum chemistries of fawns suggested that low-protein diets caused reductions in maternal nutritional status by the second year. The results of this study and those of preliminary field observations suggested that compromised immunocompetence of neonatal fawns may be manifested only during chronic malnutrition, when the protein reserves of does become depleted or insufficient.
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