Cross-fostering eggs reveals that female collared flycatchers adjust clutch sex ratios according to parental ability to invest in offspring

被引:32
作者
Bowers, E. Keith [3 ]
Munclinger, Pavel [4 ]
Bures, Stanislav [1 ,2 ]
Kucerova, Lenka [5 ]
Nadvornik, Petr [5 ]
Krist, Milos [1 ,2 ,6 ]
机构
[1] Palacky Univ, Fac Sci, Dept Zool, Olomouc 77146, Czech Republic
[2] Palacky Univ, Fac Sci, Ornithol Lab, Olomouc 77146, Czech Republic
[3] Illinois State Univ, Sch Biol Sci, Behav Ecol Evolut & Systemat Sect, Normal, IL 61761 USA
[4] Charles Univ Prague, Fac Sci, Dept Zool, CR-12844 Prague, Czech Republic
[5] Palacky Univ, Dept Cell Biol & Genet, Olomouc 78371, Czech Republic
[6] Museum Nat Hist, Olomouc 77173, Czech Republic
关键词
Ficedula albicollis; maternal effect; overdispersion; sex allocation; Trivers-Willard; JUVENILE MARSH TITS; EXTRA-PAIR YOUNG; SEASONAL-VARIATION; MATERNAL INVESTMENT; HATCHING ORDER; FACULTATIVE MANIPULATION; PREDOMINANT DETERMINANT; POPULATION DIVERGENCE; FICEDULA-ALBICOLLIS; NATURAL-SELECTION;
D O I
10.1111/mec.12106
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Across animal taxa, reproductive success is generally more variable and more strongly dependent upon body condition for males than for females; in such cases, parents able to produce offspring in above-average condition are predicted to produce sons, whereas parents unable to produce offspring in good condition should produce daughters. We tested this hypothesis in the collared flycatcher (Ficedula albicollis) by cross-fostering eggs among nests and using the condition of foster young that parents raised to fledging as a functional measure of their ability to produce fit offspring. As predicted, females raising heavier-than-average foster fledglings with their social mate initially produced male-biased primary sex ratios, whereas those raising lighter-than-average foster fledglings produced female-biased primary sex ratios. Females also produced male-biased clutches when mated to males with large secondary sexual characters (wing patches), and tended to produce male-biased clutches earlier within breeding seasons relative to females breeding later. However, females did not adjust the sex of individuals within their clutches; sex was distributed randomly with respect to egg size, laying order and paternity. Future research investigating the proximate mechanisms linking ecological contexts and the quality of offspring parents are able to produce with primary sex-ratio variation could provide fundamental insight into the evolution of context-dependent sex-ratio adjustment.
引用
收藏
页码:215 / 228
页数:14
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