1. Low food abundance prior to breeding results in female-biased sex allocation in Tengmalm’s Owl (Aegolius funerus)
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Petra Menclová, Marek Kouba, Luděk Bartoš, Petr Kouba, Karel Šťastný, Alena Popelková, Václav Tomášek, Tomáš Bušina, Jan Hanel, and Adam Dušek
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0106 biological sciences ,biology ,Reproductive success ,Aegolius ,Offspring ,Fledge ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,010605 ornithology ,Reproductive value ,Parental investment ,Sex ratio ,Sex allocation ,Demography - Abstract
Parents can enhance their fitness by favouring that sex whose reproductive value is expected to be highest. In species in which females are the larger sex with potentially greater fitness returns, one can assume that parents should bias their investment toward daughters to increase their daughters’ reproductive value (i.e. age-specific expectation of all present and future offspring) and, thereby, indirectly increase their own inclusive fitness. In the study reported here, we investigated sex allocation in Tengmalm’s Owl (Aegolius funereus), a bird species with a pronounced female-biased sexual size dimorphism in which females are larger than the males. Assuming that parental investment would have the greatest effect on the fitness of larger daughters, we hypothesized that daughters should be favoured in good conditions and sons in poor conditions. Our study was conducted in the Czech Republic over seven breeding seasons (2006–2012). In total, 205 nestlings from 52 nests were sexed. The mean nestling sex ratio, 48.5 ± 4.6% (± standard error), did not depart from parity, and we did not identify any variable to be related to it. However, we did find that at fledging (1) the body mass of female offspring was approximately 8% heavier than that of male offspring, and (2) surprisingly, the body mass of female offspring tended to increase with decreasing prey abundance in the autumn, i.e. prior to breeding. One possible explanation of this “carry-over effect” is that parents increased their investment toward daughters to maximize their daughters’ survival and reproductive value in a poor environment. This explanation could be supported by the sex-specific effect of the adult’s condition on reproductive success. Whereas the number of fledglings tended to increase with increasing age of the mother, it also increased with decreasing wing length of the father. These results indicate that in the Tengmalm’s Owl large body size may be mainly important for female reproduction, while male reproductive success is independent of body size or is even associated with small body size. To the best of our knowledge, our study is the first to have found such a positive, relatively long-lasting, sex-specific carry-over effect of pre-breeding prey abundance on the condition of female offspring in a bird of prey species.
- Published
- 2019
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