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Effects of experimentally increased costs of activity during reproduction on parental investment and self-maintenance in tropical house wrens

Authors :
Kirk C. Klasing
Thomas H. Dijkstra
G. Henk Visser
B. Irene Tieleman
Joseph B. Williams
Isotope Research
Tieleman lab
Source :
Behavioral Ecology, 19(5), 949-959. Oxford University Press
Publication Year :
2008

Abstract

Life-history theory assumes that organisms trade-off current against future reproduction to maximize fitness. Experimental explorations of the costs of reproduction have not yielded a clear understanding of the nature of these costs but rather point to a complex set of allocation possibilities among several physiological functions and behaviors. We investigated how experimentally increased flight costs affected the trade-off between parental investment and self-maintenance in tropical house wrens, which have relatively high annual survival and multiple breeding opportunities per year. We predicted that handicapped wrens would not increase their energy expenditure but instead decrease their effort to rear young in order to maintain their own body condition. Our results largely supported these predictions: handicapped parents decreased their nestling feeding frequency but did neither alter their field metabolic rate (FMR) nor compromise their body condition as measured by basal metabolic rate (BMR) and several measures of innate immune function. Reduced feeding rates did not affect nestling body mass growth but resulted in decreased structural growth (length of tarsus). The latter result can be explained if parents shifted the type of prey brought to offspring or altered the amount of food brought per trip. The experiment-wide positive correlations among FMR, BMR, and feeding frequency are in agreement with the hypothesis that hard work requires elevated levels of BMR. These correlations, in combination with the absence of a handicap treatment effect on FMR or BMR, do not lend support for predictions from studies in the laboratory that birds compensate hard work during the day by lowering their BMR at night. Considering a complex set of allocation possibilities among several physiological functions and behaviors, we conclude that tropical wrens take out the costs of a handicap largely on their offspring quality not on self-maintenance processes. Copyright 2008, Oxford University Press.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10452249
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Behavioral Ecology, 19(5), 949-959. Oxford University Press
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ee395096ee7b0a3ca4b5f026c9413958