Testing the developmental stress hypothesis in canaries: consequences of nutritional stress on adult song phenotype and mate attractiveness

被引:15
作者
Muller, Wendt [1 ]
Vergauwen, Jonas [1 ]
Eens, Marcel [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Antwerp, Dept Biol Ethol, B-2610 Antwerp, Wilrijk, Belgium
关键词
Developmental stress; Sexual selection; Growth; Bird song; FINCH TAENIOPYGIA-GUTTATA; ZEBRA FINCH; SERINUS-CANARIA; SEXUAL ATTRACTIVENESS; YOLK TESTOSTERONE; BRAIN-DEVELOPMENT; HONEST SIGNAL; BIRD SONG; FEMALE; CHOICE;
D O I
10.1007/s00265-010-0989-x
中图分类号
B84 [心理学]; C [社会科学总论]; Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ; 030303 ; 04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
The complex songs of songbirds are thought to have evolved through sexual selection. Sexually selected signals must be associated with costs in order to ensure their honesty as indicator of male quality. Costs may relate to the development of the neural substrate underlying song learning, which develops already very early in life. Song may, therefore, serve as an indicator of the early developmental history. This nutritional stress hypothesis has initially been confirmed for a variety of species, but recent studies using zebra finches as a model species reported somewhat inconsistent effects, and the functional consequences of changes in adult song phenotype remain unclear. We tested the nutritional stress hypothesis in canaries by manipulating either the brood size or the food quality postfledging. The brood size manipulation had a significant effect on early development, and low food quality postfledging led to a transient reduction in body mass. However, we did not find evidence that any of the song traits measured reflected the early developmental conditions, which is in conflict with the nutritional stress hypothesis. Canaries may be less vulnerable to nutritional stress or are able to compensate stressful conditions during early development. However, if males compensated, this compensation may have come at a survival cost. Female mate choice decisions were independent of the developmental history of a male. Instead, females preferred males singing longer song bouts, a trait that may contain a heritable component.
引用
收藏
页码:1767 / 1777
页数:11
相关论文
共 60 条
[31]   Roller canary song produced without learning from external sources [J].
Metfessel, M. .
SCIENCE, 1935, 81 (2106) :470-470
[32]   An experimental study on the causes of sex-biased mortality in the black-headed gull -: the possible role of testosterone [J].
Müller, W ;
Groothuis, TGG ;
Eising, CM ;
Dijkstra, C .
JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY, 2005, 74 (04) :735-741
[33]   Yolk testosterone, postnatal growth and song in male canaries [J].
Muller, Wendt ;
Vergauwen, Jonas ;
Eens, Marcel .
HORMONES AND BEHAVIOR, 2008, 54 (01) :125-133
[34]   Behaviour-genetic analysis of canary song: Inter-strain differences in sensory learning, and epigenetic rules [J].
Mundinger, PC .
ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR, 1995, 50 :1491-1511
[35]   Song tutoring influences female song preferences in domesticated canaries [J].
Nagle, L ;
Kreutzer, ML .
BEHAVIOUR, 1997, 134 :89-104
[36]   Living with the Past: Nutritional Stress in Juvenile Males Has Immediate Effects on their Plumage Ornaments and on Adult Attractiveness in Zebra Finches [J].
Naguib, Marc ;
Nemitz, Andrea .
PLOS ONE, 2007, 2 (09)
[37]   Early developmental conditions and male attractiveness in zebra finches [J].
Naguib, Marc ;
Heim, Claudia ;
Gil, Diego .
ETHOLOGY, 2008, 114 (03) :255-261
[38]   BRAIN SPACE FOR A LEARNED TASK [J].
NOTTEBOHM, F ;
KASPARIAN, S ;
PANDAZIS, C .
BRAIN RESEARCH, 1981, 213 (01) :99-109
[39]   DEVELOPMENTAL AND SEASONAL-CHANGES IN CANARY SONG AND THEIR RELATION TO CHANGES IN THE ANATOMY OF SONG-CONTROL NUCLEI [J].
NOTTEBOHM, F ;
NOTTEBOHM, ME ;
CRANE, L .
BEHAVIORAL AND NEURAL BIOLOGY, 1986, 46 (03) :445-471
[40]  
Nowicki S, 1998, AM ZOOL, V38, P179