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Animal Behaviour: Psychology 3750

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Alternative Reproductive Strategies in Male ... 3. How important is biparental care? ... 3. Importance of biparental care. Warbler mating systems (Fig 7:10) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Animal Behaviour: Psychology 3750


1
Animal BehaviourPsychology 3750
  • Lecture 23 November 13, 2009

2
Alternative Reproductive Strategies in Male
Atlantic Salmon (Fleming Reynolds, 2004)
  • Note change from (a) at sea to
  • (b) on spawning grounds

3
Alternate strategies in male salmon hooknose
versus jack
4
What determines monogamy/polygynous?
  • 1. Can males monopolize?
  • 2. Second female success?
  • 3. How important is biparental care?

5
1. Resource defense polygyny depends on resource
distribution
6
2. Polygyny female reproductive perspective
Lark Buntings
7
  • Female lark bunting choices over successive days
    at
  • Onset of breeding season (Pleszcynska Hansell
    1980

8
Why do females mate with polygynous males?
  • If resources (territories) vary in quality,
    females may do better as second females (e.g.,
    lark buntings)
  • Polygyny threshold model

9
PTM Kenyan Kipsigis (Borgerhoff-Mulder)
  • Resettling Kenyans after European colonization
  • Larger territories, more additional wives
  • More wives, lower female reproductive success

10
3. Importance of biparental care
11
Warbler mating systems (Fig 710)
  • Left can trace evolution of degree of paternal
    care
  • Right Males invest more when food supply is low

12
Parental Care
  • What does parental care include?
  • Direct
  • Feeding, brooding, defence
  • Indirect
  • Territorial defence, feeding female?

13
Two Models of Parental Care
  • 1. Provisioning (ethologist)
  • 2. Parental investment versus conflict
    (behavioral ecologist)

14
Parent-young contact maintained by
  • Contact maintained by
  • Early parents (1)
  • Middle both
  • Late young, (weaning conflict) (2)

15
Investment theory (Trivers)
  • Weaning occurs when cost to parent(s) exceeds
    benefit to offspring measured by
  • survival of current offspring
  • Production of future offspring

16
Extra-pair copulations (EPCs) males
  • Advantages
  • Increase RS?
  • Disadvantages
  • Decrease RS?

17
Advantages of EPCs for females (note p246 males
go to females?)
  • Solicit paternal care/reduce infanticide
  • Choose good genes/Increase genetic diversity
  • Involved in mate switch/mate choice
  • Fertility insurance

18
Should males rear extra-pair young? (a
disadvantage for females?)
  • Traditional theory says not!
  • Paternal certainty ---gt paternal care
  • Less support than predicted Dunnocks fit
    prediction
  • Alpha males feed gt Beta males

19
Certainty of Paternity
  • Why would non-sires provide care?
  • Failure to recognize/ cost of error
  • Also keep mate, territory, or sire next
    brood/litter

20
EPC, paternal care paternal certainty an
interspecific relationship
21
Extra-pair copulations seabirds e.g., Common
Murre
  • Paradox extensive paternal care single murre
    cant raise chick
  • Apparently forced by male
  • Actually female controlled (Walsh, 2001)
  • Only one extra-pair chick in established pairs

22
EPF variation 40 of species 0-5 EPFs 30
species lt 25 EPFs
Seabirds (murres)
Passerines (RWB), IB, warblers
23
Is there a relationship between amount of
paternal care and EPF rate?
  • Murres vs Passerines (indigo buntings, RWB,
    warblers, dunnocks)
  • Species differences in importance of paternal
    care
  • But not at individual level costs are high?
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