首页> 外文期刊>Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology >Brood sex ratio modulates the effects of extra food on parental effort and sibling competition in a sexually dimorphic raptor
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Brood sex ratio modulates the effects of extra food on parental effort and sibling competition in a sexually dimorphic raptor

机译:育雏性比例调制额外食物对父母的努力和兄弟姐妹竞争在性行为猛禽中的影响

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摘要

Conflicts are inherent to family systems and may occur at three levels. First, each parent benefits if its mate takes the greater share of parental investment. Second, offspring try to manipulate their parents into devolving more resources than it is optimal for them. Third, siblings compete for resources. Food availability can affect the dynamics of each level of interaction. By means of a food supplementation experiment, we assessed how the initial availability of extra food during breeding affects later parental effort, sibling competition, and parent-offspring interactions in a small dimorphic raptor, the lesser kestrel (Falco naumanni). Being the larger sex, female nestlings are likely to have higher energy requirements. Female-biased broods had a higher rate of aggressive interactions and were fed more frequently in control nests. Food was not shared evenly among broodmates, and daughters tended to receive more feedings than sons. In young broods, parents controlled food allocation by entering the nest, whereas in older broods, offspring controlled food allocation by monopolizing the nest site entrance. Extra food induced male parents to reduce the rate of feedings delivered by entering the nest. Additionally, extra food improved nestling growth in male-biased broods, leading to an increase in the frequency of parental feedings and aggressive interactions, likely due to faster growth rates. These findings reveal a key effect of brood sex ratio in determining family interactions in a species with reverse sexual size dimorphism and suggest that all levels of conflict between family members should be considered simultaneously when investigating the evolution of parental care. Significance statement Breeding poses energetic costs on parents, and environmental resources are usually limited. To successfully breed, parents coordinate their efforts and manage the allocation of resources to offspring, while offspring communicate their needs. Conflict can arise among family members: each parent benefits if the other takes on most of the workload, offspring ask for more care than what parents can provide, and siblings compete for food. Food availability affects these interaction levels separately, but they have rarely been integrated. By providing extra food to lesser kestrel (Falco naumanni) nests, we show that parental provisioning behaviour and sibling competition are simultaneously affected by initial resource availability during breeding. Although lesser kestrel nestlings show only moderate sex differences in body size (and therefore energy requirements), the effect of extra food on family interactions primarily depended on the sex ratio of the brood.
机译:冲突是家庭制度固有的,可能发生在三个层面。首先,如果配偶在父母的投资中占有更大的份额,父母双方都会受益。第二,后代试图操纵他们的父母,让他们把更多的资源转移到对他们来说不理想的地方。第三,兄弟姐妹争夺资源。食物的可获得性会影响每一层次的相互作用。通过食物补充实验,我们评估了小红隼(Falco naumanni)在繁殖过程中最初获得的额外食物如何影响后来的父母努力、兄弟姐妹竞争和亲子互动。作为较大的性别,雌性雏鸟可能有更高的能量需求。雌性偏亲的幼崽有更高的攻击性互动率,并且在对照巢中喂养的频率更高。育儿伙伴之间的食物分配不均衡,女儿往往比儿子得到更多的食物。在幼崽中,父母通过进入巢来控制食物分配,而在年长的幼崽中,后代通过垄断巢址入口来控制食物分配。额外的食物导致雄性父母通过进入巢穴来降低喂食率。此外,额外的食物改善了偏向雄性的幼崽的雏鸟生长,导致父母喂养和攻击性互动的频率增加,这可能是由于更快的生长速度。这些发现揭示了在一个具有反向性大小二型性的物种中,育儿性别比在决定家庭互动中的关键作用,并建议在调查父母照料的演变时,应同时考虑家庭成员之间的所有冲突水平。繁育给父母带来了巨大的成本,而环境资源通常是有限的。为了成功繁殖,父母协调他们的努力,管理分配给后代的资源,同时后代传达他们的需求。家庭成员之间可能会产生冲突:如果另一方承担大部分工作量,父母双方都会受益,子女要求的照料比父母能提供的要多,兄弟姐妹会争夺食物。食物可获得性单独影响这些相互作用水平,但它们很少被整合。通过为小红隼(Falco naumanni)的巢穴提供额外的食物,我们表明,在繁殖期间,父母的供应行为和兄弟姐妹的竞争同时受到初始资源可用性的影响。虽然小红隼的雏鸟在体型上只表现出适度的性别差异(因此能量需求),但额外食物对家庭互动的影响主要取决于育雏的性别比。

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