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首页> 外文期刊>Journal of ornithology >Son or daughter, it does not matter: brood parasites do not adjust offspring sex based on their own or host quality
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Son or daughter, it does not matter: brood parasites do not adjust offspring sex based on their own or host quality

机译:儿子或女儿,没关系:育雏寄生虫不根据自己或主持人质量调整后代性行为

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Sex allocation theory posits that parents should adjust offspring sex ratio based on the costs and benefits associated with the production of either sex in a given context. Maternal condition should influence sex ratios when it has sex-specific impacts on offspring fitness (Trivers-Willard hypothesis) or when rearing costs differ between sons and daughters (cost of reproduction hypothesis). In sexually size-dimorphic species, mothers in good condition are predicted to produce an excess of offspring of the larger sex, whereas mothers in poor condition the opposite. Brood parasites constitute an exciting model for testing sex allocation theory as parasitic females are freed from rearing costs while these costs are covered by the hosts. Here, we investigate the effect of maternal and host quality (both expressed as egg volume and blue-green chroma) on offspring sex allocation in the common cuckoo (Cuculus canorus) parasitizing the great reed warbler (Acrocephalus arundinaceus). We found no significant effect of parasite egg-laying date and maternal or host quality on sex ratio. One explanation may be that parasitic females, instead of investing in differential sex allocation, invest in securing egg acceptance by the host, by laying non-randomly within a host population to match the appearance of host clutches. Alternatively, male and female parasite eggs do not differ in size suggesting that their production bears comparable costs. This, together with the fact that the whole parental care is covered by the hosts, supports the previous findings that the common cuckoo does not adjust offspring sex ratio.
机译:性分配理论假定父母应根据与在特定背景下的性别的成本和益处来调整后代性别比率。母体病情应影响性别比例,当它对后代健身(TRIVER-WILLARD假设)或当儿女之间的饲养成本(繁殖假设的成本)不同时,应对性别特定的影响。在性尺寸 - 二态物种中,母亲的状况良好地预测,产生了更大的性别的过剩,而条件较差的母亲相反。育雏寄生虫构成一个令人兴奋的模型,用于测试性分配理论,因为寄生女性免于饲养成本,而主机覆盖这些成本。在这里,我们调查母体和宿主质量(两者表示为鸡蛋体积和蓝绿色色度)对普通咕咕(Cuculus Canorus)的后代性别分配的影响(Cuculus Canorus)寄生巨乳莺(Acrocephalus arundinaesus)。我们发现寄生虫蛋类日期和母体或宿主质量对性别比没有显着影响。一种解释可能是寄生女性,而不是投资差异性分配,通过在宿主人群内铺设非随机地铺设宿主群体来保护宿主的鸡蛋接受。或者,雄性和雌性寄生虫卵的规模没有差异,表明其生产具有可比的成本。这与主机覆盖整个父母护理的事实,支持以前的发现,即普通咕咕不会调整后代性别比例。

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