| Literature DB >> 28262803 |
Eva Ringler1,2, Kristina Barbara Beck2, Steffen Weinlein2, Ludwig Huber1, Max Ringler2,3.
Abstract
Systematic infanticide of unrelated young has been reported in several animal taxa. Particular attention has been given to carnivores and primates, where infanticide is a sexually selected strategy of males to gain increased access to female mating partners. Cannibals must ensure avoiding their own offspring and targeting only unrelated young. Therefore, decision rules are needed to mediate parental and cannibalistic behaviour. Here we show experimentally that male poison frogs adjust their parental responses - care or infanticide - towards unrelated clutches according to their territorial status. Male frogs followed the simple rule 'care for any clutch' inside their territory, but immediately switched to cannibalism when establishing a new territory. This demonstrates that simple cognitive rules can mediate complex behaviours such as parental care, and that care and cannibalism are antagonistically linked. Non-parental infanticide is mediated by territorial cues and presumably serves to prevent misdirected care in this poison frog. Our results thus prompt a re-consideration of evolutionary and causal aspects of parental decision making, by suggesting that selective infanticide of unrelated young may generally become adaptive when the risks and costs of misdirected care are high.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28262803 PMCID: PMC5337939 DOI: 10.1038/srep43544
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Experimental design.
After capture, (A) half of the males were returned to their own terrarium (“Resident”), (B) the other half was transferred to a new terrarium (“Takeover”). In both experimental treatments an unrelated clutch was placed inside the tank before males were released. Picture drawn by Nadja Kavcik-Graumann and Andrius Pašukonis.
Figure 2Male responses across the two experimental conditions.
Male behaviour towards unrelated clutches was strongly context dependent: (A) ‘Residents’ mainly responded with parental care, while all ‘takeover’ males preyed on the clutches; (B) the frequency of cannibalistic events and (C) the total number of tadpoles consumed were significantly higher in ‘takeover’ males.