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Territory Quality and Plumage Morph Predict Offspring Sex Ratio Variation in a Raptor

Parents may adapt their offspring sex ratio in response to their own phenotype and environmental conditions. The most significant causes for adaptive sex-ratio variation might express themselves as different distributions of fitness components between sexes along a given variable. Several causes for...

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Autores principales: Chakarov, Nayden, Pauli, Martina, Mueller, Anna-Katharina, Potiek, Astrid, Grünkorn, Thomas, Dijkstra, Cor, Krüger, Oliver
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4596812/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26445010
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0138295
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author Chakarov, Nayden
Pauli, Martina
Mueller, Anna-Katharina
Potiek, Astrid
Grünkorn, Thomas
Dijkstra, Cor
Krüger, Oliver
author_facet Chakarov, Nayden
Pauli, Martina
Mueller, Anna-Katharina
Potiek, Astrid
Grünkorn, Thomas
Dijkstra, Cor
Krüger, Oliver
author_sort Chakarov, Nayden
collection PubMed
description Parents may adapt their offspring sex ratio in response to their own phenotype and environmental conditions. The most significant causes for adaptive sex-ratio variation might express themselves as different distributions of fitness components between sexes along a given variable. Several causes for differential sex allocation in raptors with reversed sexual size dimorphism have been suggested. We search for correlates of fledgling sex in an extensive dataset on common buzzards Buteo buteo, a long-lived bird of prey. Larger female offspring could be more resource-demanding and starvation-prone and thus the costly sex. Prominent factors such as brood size and laying date did not predict nestling sex. Nonetheless, lifetime sex ratio (LSR, potentially indicative of individual sex allocation constraints) and overall nestling sex were explained by territory quality with more females being produced in better territories. Additionally, parental plumage morphs and the interaction of morph and prey abundance tended to explain LSR and nestling sex, indicating local adaptation of sex allocation However, in a limited census of nestling mortality, not females but males tended to die more frequently in prey-rich years. Also, although females could have potentially longer reproductive careers, a subset of our data encompassing full individual life histories showed that longevity and lifetime reproductive success were similarly distributed between the sexes. Thus, a basis for adaptive sex allocation in this population remains elusive. Overall, in common buzzards most major determinants of reproductive success appeared to have no effect on sex ratio but sex allocation may be adapted to local conditions in morph-specific patterns.
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spelling pubmed-45968122015-10-20 Territory Quality and Plumage Morph Predict Offspring Sex Ratio Variation in a Raptor Chakarov, Nayden Pauli, Martina Mueller, Anna-Katharina Potiek, Astrid Grünkorn, Thomas Dijkstra, Cor Krüger, Oliver PLoS One Research Article Parents may adapt their offspring sex ratio in response to their own phenotype and environmental conditions. The most significant causes for adaptive sex-ratio variation might express themselves as different distributions of fitness components between sexes along a given variable. Several causes for differential sex allocation in raptors with reversed sexual size dimorphism have been suggested. We search for correlates of fledgling sex in an extensive dataset on common buzzards Buteo buteo, a long-lived bird of prey. Larger female offspring could be more resource-demanding and starvation-prone and thus the costly sex. Prominent factors such as brood size and laying date did not predict nestling sex. Nonetheless, lifetime sex ratio (LSR, potentially indicative of individual sex allocation constraints) and overall nestling sex were explained by territory quality with more females being produced in better territories. Additionally, parental plumage morphs and the interaction of morph and prey abundance tended to explain LSR and nestling sex, indicating local adaptation of sex allocation However, in a limited census of nestling mortality, not females but males tended to die more frequently in prey-rich years. Also, although females could have potentially longer reproductive careers, a subset of our data encompassing full individual life histories showed that longevity and lifetime reproductive success were similarly distributed between the sexes. Thus, a basis for adaptive sex allocation in this population remains elusive. Overall, in common buzzards most major determinants of reproductive success appeared to have no effect on sex ratio but sex allocation may be adapted to local conditions in morph-specific patterns. Public Library of Science 2015-10-07 /pmc/articles/PMC4596812/ /pubmed/26445010 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0138295 Text en © 2015 Chakarov et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Chakarov, Nayden
Pauli, Martina
Mueller, Anna-Katharina
Potiek, Astrid
Grünkorn, Thomas
Dijkstra, Cor
Krüger, Oliver
Territory Quality and Plumage Morph Predict Offspring Sex Ratio Variation in a Raptor
title Territory Quality and Plumage Morph Predict Offspring Sex Ratio Variation in a Raptor
title_full Territory Quality and Plumage Morph Predict Offspring Sex Ratio Variation in a Raptor
title_fullStr Territory Quality and Plumage Morph Predict Offspring Sex Ratio Variation in a Raptor
title_full_unstemmed Territory Quality and Plumage Morph Predict Offspring Sex Ratio Variation in a Raptor
title_short Territory Quality and Plumage Morph Predict Offspring Sex Ratio Variation in a Raptor
title_sort territory quality and plumage morph predict offspring sex ratio variation in a raptor
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4596812/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26445010
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0138295
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