TY - JOUR
T1 - Cuckoldry and lack of parentage-dependent paternal care in yellow warblers
T2 - A cost-benefit approach
AU - Yezerinac, Stephen M.
AU - Weatherhead, Patrick J.
AU - Boag, Peter T.
N1 - Funding Information:
The Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (Canada) supported this work with grants to P.J.W., P.T.B., the Queen’s University Molecular Ecology Laboratory and a scholarship to S.M.Y. Terri Taylor provided invaluable assistance in the field and in watching videotapes of parental provisioning. Queen’s University Biological Station provided exceptional logistical support. The Murray and Curtis families kindly gave us access to their land. The Canadian Wildlife Service gave permission to collect eggs. A. JeVreys and H. Shin provided their probes. S.M.Y. thanks the EEB group at Queen’s, especially members of the Montgomerie lab, for their hospitality and input. Helpful comments from G. Hill, P. Schwagmeyer and an anonymous referee improved the paper.
PY - 1996/10
Y1 - 1996/10
N2 - Theory suggests that a male strategy of reducing parental care in response to reduced parentage should evolve only under certain conditions. Expected paternity in subsequent matings is predicted to be primary in effect, because it determines whether there is a future benefit to compensate males for the cost of reduced care. This study, tested whether provisioning of nestlings by socially monogamous male yellow warblers, Dendroica petechia, varied with the males' parentage in the brood and how males' paternity varied in subsequent matings. Analysis included observations of parental care from 40 nests (31 of which had paternity determined by multi-locus DNA fingerprinting) and paternity results from 130 families over 3 years. Male care was variable but unrelated to parentage, and males were observed to provide typical amounts of parental care to broods in which they had no parentage. Individual males' within-pair parentage generally declined within a season (with re-nesting), varied inconsistently between years and was unrelated to age or breeding experience. Survival between breeding seasons was low (30%) and independent of within-pair parentage. These patterns collectively suggest that the benefit of facultatively reducing parental care when parentage is reduced rarely exceeds the costs. Thus, selection for parentage-dependent care is apparently absent or weak, which could explain the absence of parentage-dependent care in this population of yellow warblers.
AB - Theory suggests that a male strategy of reducing parental care in response to reduced parentage should evolve only under certain conditions. Expected paternity in subsequent matings is predicted to be primary in effect, because it determines whether there is a future benefit to compensate males for the cost of reduced care. This study, tested whether provisioning of nestlings by socially monogamous male yellow warblers, Dendroica petechia, varied with the males' parentage in the brood and how males' paternity varied in subsequent matings. Analysis included observations of parental care from 40 nests (31 of which had paternity determined by multi-locus DNA fingerprinting) and paternity results from 130 families over 3 years. Male care was variable but unrelated to parentage, and males were observed to provide typical amounts of parental care to broods in which they had no parentage. Individual males' within-pair parentage generally declined within a season (with re-nesting), varied inconsistently between years and was unrelated to age or breeding experience. Survival between breeding seasons was low (30%) and independent of within-pair parentage. These patterns collectively suggest that the benefit of facultatively reducing parental care when parentage is reduced rarely exceeds the costs. Thus, selection for parentage-dependent care is apparently absent or weak, which could explain the absence of parentage-dependent care in this population of yellow warblers.
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U2 - 10.1006/anbe.1996.0227
DO - 10.1006/anbe.1996.0227
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0030251208
SN - 0003-3472
VL - 52
SP - 821
EP - 832
JO - Animal Behaviour
JF - Animal Behaviour
IS - 4
ER -