| Literature DB >> 22957095 |
Gregorio Moreno-Rueda1, Tomás Redondo.
Abstract
Theoretical models aimed at explaining the evolution of honest, informative begging signals employed by nestling birds to solicit food from their parents, require that dishonest signalers incur a net viability cost in order to prevent runaway escalation of signal intensity over evolutionary time. Previous attempts to determine such a cost empirically have identified two candidate physiological costs associated with exaggerated begging: a growth and an immunological cost. However, they failed to take into account the fact that those costs are potentially offset by the fact that nestlings that invest more in begging are also likely to obtain more food. In this study, we test experimentally whether a 25% increase in ingested food compensates for growth and immunological costs of extra begging in southern shrike (Lanius meridionalis) nestlings. Three nestmates matched by size were given three treatments: low begging, high begging-same food intake, and high begging-extra food intake. We found that, while a higher food intake did effectively compensate for the growth cost, it failed to compensate for the immunological cost, measured as T-cell mediated immune response against an innocuous mitogen. Thus, we show for the first time that escalated begging has an associated physiological net cost likely to affect nestling survival negatively.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22957095 PMCID: PMC3434154 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0044647
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Mean ± SE values measured for each variable for low begging-normal food (LB-NF), high begging-normal food (HB-NF) and high begging-extra food (HB-EF) nestlings.
| LB-NF ( | HB-NF ( | HB-EF ( | |
| Initial body mass (g) | 21.84±1.43 | 20.30±1.21 | 21.17±1.26 |
| Food ingested (g) | 8.91±0.79 | 8.10±0.66 | 10.51±0.85 |
| Time spent begging (s/h) | 2.14±0.24 | 30.34±2.71 | 28.00±2.69 |
| Mean begging intensity | 1.08±0.04 | 1.12±0.05 | 1.10±0.04 |
| Growth rate (g) | 3.43±0.49 | 3.23±0.62 | 4.79±0.70 |
| Immune response (mm) | 1.13±0.10 | 0.73±0.07 | 0.77±0.06 |
Figure 1The relationship between immune response to phytohaemagglutinin (patagium thickness in mm) and time begging (in seconds per hour).