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Quantifying the costs and benefits of protective egg coating in a Chrysomelid beetle
Authors:TZO ZEN ANG  CIAN O'LUANAIGH  SEAN A RANDS  REW BALMFORD  REA MANICA
Institution:Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, U.K.;, Centre for Ecology and Conservation, University of Exeter in Cornwall, Penryn, U.K.;and School of Clinical Veterinary Science, University of Bristol, Bristol, U.K.
Abstract:Abstract.  1. The costs and benefits of behavioural care of offspring can often be easily quantified through observations and experiments. Other forms of parental investment, on the other hand, are usually less amenable to cost–benefit analysis.
2. Here, the costs and benefits are estimated for protective egg coating by a chrysomelid beetle, Cryptocephalus hypochaeridis , where the female spends a considerable amount of time adding extra structural components to each of the eggs after laying them.
3. Adding this protective coating was very costly, both in terms of material and energy used: the mass of the extrachorion is equivalent to half the mass of the egg, and water loss and energy expenditure while coating the egg is equivalent to half what would be lost while laying a further egg.
4. Choice tests with egg predators demonstrated that these high costs are offset by benefits in terms of protection against predation: whereas uncoated eggs are readily eaten by predators, coated eggs are always rejected.
Keywords:Body mass              Cryptocephalus hypochaeridis            egg coating  energetic cost  extrachorion  faecal material  parental care  protection  predation
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