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Sex roles in nest keeping – how information asymmetry contributes to parent‐offspring co‐adaptation

机译:筑巢中的性别角色–信息不对称如何促进父母-后代的共同适应

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摘要

Parental food provisioning and offspring begging influence each other reciprocally. This makes both traits agents and targets of selection, which may ultimately lead to co‐adaptation. The latter may reflect co‐adapted parent and offspring genotypes or could be due to maternal effects. Maternal effects are in turn likely to facilitate in particular mother‐offspring co‐adaptation, further emphasized by the possibility that mothers are sometimes found to be more responsive to offspring need. However, parents may not only differ in their sensitivity, but often play different roles in postnatal care. This potentially impinges on the access to information about offspring need. We here manipulated the information on offspring need as perceived by parents by playing back begging calls at a constant frequency in the nest‐box of blue tits (Cyanistes caeruleus). We measured the parental response in provisioning to our treatment, paying particular attention to sex differences in parental roles and whether such differences alter the perception of the intensity of our manipulation. This enabled us to investigate whether an information asymmetry about offspring need exists between parents and how such an asymmetry relates to co‐adaptation between parental provisioning and offspring begging. Our results show that parents indeed differed in the frequency how often they perceived the playback due to the fact that females spent more time with their offspring in the nest box. Correcting for the effective exposure of an adult to the playback, the parental response in provisioning covaried more strongly (positive) with offspring begging intensity, independent of the parental sex, indicating coadaptation on the phenotypic level. Females were not more sensitive to experimentally increased offspring need than males, but they were exposed to more broadcasted begging calls. Therefore, sex differences in access to information about offspring need, due to different parental roles, have the potential to impinge on family conflicts and their resolution.
机译:父母的食物供应和后代乞讨相互影响。这使特质成为代理和选择的目标,最终可能导致共同适应。后者可能反映了共同适应的父母和后代的基因型,或者可能是由于母亲的影响。产妇的影响反过来可能会特别促进母子后代的适应,并进一步强调了有时发现母子对后代需求更敏感的可能性。但是,父母不仅可能在敏感性方面有所不同,而且在产后保健中通常扮演着不同的角色。这可能会影响对后代需求信息的获取。我们在这里通过以恒定的频率在蓝山雀(Cyanistes caeruleus)的巢箱中播放乞讨电话,来操纵父母认为的有关后代需求的信息。我们测量了父母对我们提供的治疗的反应,特别注意父母角色中的性别差异以及这种差异是否会改变我们对操纵强度的认识。这使我们能够调查父母之间是否存在关于后代需求的信息不对称性,以及这种不对称性与亲子供应和后代乞讨之间的共适应关系如何。我们的结果表明,由于雌性花更多的时间与后代在巢箱中的事实,父母在回放频率上的确存在差异。为了纠正成年人对放像的有效暴露,配给中的父母反应与后代乞讨强度之间的相关性更大(正),与父母的性别无关,表明在表型水平上的适应性。女性对实验性后代需求的敏感度并不比男性高,但她们受到更多广播的乞求。因此,由于父母角色的不同,获得后代需求信息的性别差异可能会影响家庭冲突及其解决。

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