| Literature DB >> 18761745 |
Akos Pogány1, István Szentirmai, Jan Komdeur, Tamás Székely.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The trade-off between current and future parental investment is often different between males and females. This difference may lead to sexual conflict between parents over care provisioning in animals that breed with multiple mates. One of the most obvious manifestations of sexual conflict over care is offspring desertion whereby one parent deserts the young to increase its reproductive success at the expense of its mate. Offspring desertion is a wide-spread behavior, and its frequency often varies within populations. We studied the consistency of offspring desertion in a small passerine bird, the Eurasian penduline tit Remiz pendulinus, that has an extremely variable breeding system. Both males and females are sequentially polygamous, and a single parent (either the male or the female) incubates the eggs and rears the young. About 28-40% of offspring are abandoned by both parents, and these offspring perish. Here we investigate whether the variation in offspring desertion in a population emerges either by each individual behaving consistently between different broods, or it is driven by the environment.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18761745 PMCID: PMC2535784 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2148-8-242
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Evol Biol ISSN: 1471-2148 Impact factor: 3.260
Frequencies of parental care in four European populations of penduline tit Remiz pendulinus.
| Population | Female-only care (%) | Male-only care (%) | Biparental desertion (%) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sweden ( | 48 | 18 | 34 | [ |
| Germany ( | 65 | 7 | 28 | [ |
| Austria ( | 54 | 14 | 32 | [ |
| Hungary ( | 49 | 11 | 40 | [ |
In all populations a single penduline tit (either the male or the female) cares for the eggs and chicks. Biparental care is extremely rare [59], and it was not found in any of these studies. Note the high frequency of biparental desertion in all populations.
Figure 1Nest desertion by male and female Eurasian penduline tits. Males desert their nests early in the season, and some of them care for their late ones (P < 0.001, χ2 = 13.075, N = 146 nests). Female behavior is not different between early and late nests (P = 0.767, χ2 = 0.088, N = 46 nests).
Summary of nests used in randomizations.
| MALE | FEMALE | |
|---|---|---|
| No. of individuals | 57 | 20 |
| No. of individuals per year | 19 ± 2.6 | 6.7 ± 1.8 |
| No. of nests | 157 | 53 |
| No. of nests per year | 52.3 ± 8.5 | 17.7 ± 5.2 |
| No. of nests per individual | 2.75 ± 0.15 | 2.65 ± 0.17 |
| Deserted nests (%) | 91.7 | 49.1 |
| Deserted nests per year (%) | 91.3 ± 2.1 | 50.4 ± 12.7 |
| Desertion date (no. of nests) | ||
| Early nests | 67.9 ± 2.1 (72) | 51.7 ± 5.1 (22) |
| Late nests | 94.1 ± 1.4 (72) | 87.4 ± 3.1 (23) |
| Mann-Whitney | 411 | 65.5 |
| | < 0.0001 | < 0.0001 |
Number of nests used in randomizations for males and females (mean ± SE). Two data sets were constructed in which male and female penduline tits were analyzed separately. Desertion date of nests is the number of days since 1 April in each year. U and probability (P) of Mann-Whitney tests (early versus late nests for each data set) are also provided.