Literature DB >> 20528475

Passerine extrapair mating dynamics: a bayesian modeling approach comparing four species.

Jon E Brommer1, Jussi S Alho, Clotilde Biard, Joanne R Chapman, Anne Charmantier, Amelie Dreiss, Ian R Hartley, Mårten B Hjernquist, Bart Kempenaers, Jan Komdeur, Toni Laaksonen, Paula K Lehtonen, Thomas Lubjuhn, Samantha C Patrick, Balázs Rosivall, Joost M Tinbergen, Marco van der Velde, Kees van Oers, Tomasz Wilk, Wolfgang Winkel.   

Abstract

In many socially monogamous animals, females engage in extrapair copulation (EPC), causing some broods to contain both within-pair and extrapair young (EPY). The proportion of all young that are EPY varies across populations and species. Because an EPC that does not result in EPY leaves no forensic trace, this variation in the proportion of EPY reflects both variation in the tendency to engage in EPC and variation in the extrapair fertilization (EPF) process across populations and species. We analyzed data on the distribution of EPY in broods of four passerines (blue tit, great tit, collared flycatcher, and pied flycatcher), with 18,564 genotyped nestlings from 2,346 broods in two to nine populations per species. Our Bayesian modeling approach estimated the underlying probability function of EPC (assumed to be a Poisson function) and conditional binomial EPF probability. We used an information theoretical approach to show that the expected distribution of EPC per female varies across populations but that EPF probabilities vary on the above-species level (tits vs. flycatchers). Hence, for these four passerines, our model suggests that the probability of an EPC mainly is determined by ecological (population-specific) conditions, whereas EPF probabilities reflect processes that are fixed above the species level.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20528475     DOI: 10.1086/653660

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am Nat        ISSN: 0003-0147            Impact factor:   3.926


  10 in total

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5.  Promiscuity, paternity and personality in the great tit.

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6.  Experimental manipulation shows that the white wing patch in collared flycatchers is a male sexual ornament.

Authors:  Maaike E de Heij; Lars Gustafsson; Jon E Brommer
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8.  Phenological mismatch drives selection on elevation, but not on slope, of breeding time plasticity in a wild songbird.

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9.  Measuring Pre- and Post-Copulatory Sexual Selection and Their Interaction in Socially Monogamous Species with Extra-Pair Paternity.

Authors:  Emily Rebecca Alison Cramer
Journal:  Cells       Date:  2021-03-11       Impact factor: 6.600

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  10 in total

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