Parental overproduction allows siblicidal bird to adjust brood size to climate-driven prey variation

IF 2.5 3区 环境科学与生态学 Q2 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES Behavioral Ecology Pub Date : 2024-02-01 DOI:10.1093/beheco/arae007
Iván Bizberg-Barraza, Cristina Rodríguez, Hugh Drummond
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Abstract

Parental overproduction is hypothesized to hedge against uncertainty over food availability and stochastic death of offspring, and to improve brood fitness. Understanding the evolution of overproduction requires quantifying its benefits to parents across a wide range of ecological conditions, which has rarely been done. Using a multiple hypotheses approach and 30 years of data, we evaluated the benefits of overproduction in the Blue-footed booby, a seabird that lays up to three eggs asynchronously, resulting in an aggressive brood hierarchy that facilitates the death of last-hatched chicks under low food abundance. Results support the resource-tracking hypothesis, as low prey abundance (estimated from sea surface temperature and chlorophyll-a concentration) led to rapid brood reduction. The insurance hypothesis was supported in broods of three, where last-hatched chicks’ survival increased after a sibling’s death. Conversely, in broods of two, results suggested that parents abandoned last-hatched chicks following first-hatched chicks’ deaths. No direct evidence supported the facilitation hypothesis: presence of a last-hatched chick during development did not enhance its sibling’s fitness in the short or long term. The value of last-hatched offspring to parents, as “extra” or “insurance” varied with indices of food abundance, brood size, and parental age. Ninety percent of overproduction benefit came from enabling parents to capitalize on favorable conditions by fledging additional offspring. Our study provides insight into the forces driving overproduction, explaining the adaptiveness of this apparently wasteful behavior and allowing us to better predict how overproduction’s benefits might be modified by ocean warming.
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亲鸟过度繁殖使同胞鸟能够根据气候导致的猎物变化调整育雏规模
据推测,亲本过度繁殖是为了对冲食物供应的不确定性和后代的随机死亡,并提高雏鸟的适应性。要了解过度繁殖的进化过程,就必须量化其在各种生态条件下给亲本带来的益处,而目前还很少有人这样做。我们利用多重假设方法和 30 年的数据,评估了蓝脚鲣鸟过度繁殖的益处。蓝脚鲣鸟是一种异步产卵的海鸟,最多可产三枚卵,这导致了一种激进的育雏等级制度,在食物丰度较低的情况下有利于最后孵化的雏鸟死亡。结果支持资源追踪假说,因为低猎物丰度(根据海面温度和叶绿素-a浓度估算)导致雏鸟迅速减少。保险假说在三窝雏鸟中得到支持,在同胞死亡后,最后孵化的雏鸟存活率增加。相反,在两窝雏鸟中,结果表明亲鸟在第一窝雏鸟死亡后遗弃了最后孵化的雏鸟。没有直接证据支持促进假说:最后孵化的雏鸟在发育过程中的存在并不会在短期或长期内提高其兄弟姐妹的适应能力。最后孵化的后代作为 "额外 "或 "保险 "对父母的价值随食物丰度、育雏规模和父母年龄的指数而变化。90%的超产效益来自于亲鸟能够利用有利条件多孵出后代。我们的研究深入揭示了过度生产的驱动力,解释了这种看似浪费的行为的适应性,并使我们能够更好地预测海洋变暖可能如何改变过度生产的益处。
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来源期刊
Behavioral Ecology
Behavioral Ecology 环境科学-动物学
CiteScore
5.20
自引率
8.30%
发文量
93
审稿时长
3.0 months
期刊介绍: Studies on the whole range of behaving organisms, including plants, invertebrates, vertebrates, and humans, are included. Behavioral Ecology construes the field in its broadest sense to include 1) the use of ecological and evolutionary processes to explain the occurrence and adaptive significance of behavior patterns; 2) the use of behavioral processes to predict ecological patterns, and 3) empirical, comparative analyses relating behavior to the environment in which it occurs.
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