Fertilization success and UV ornamentation in blue tits Cyanistes caeruleus: correlational and experimental evidence |
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Authors: | Delhey, Kaspar Peters, Anne Johnsen, Arild Kempenaers, Bart |
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Affiliation: | Max Planck Institute for Ornithology, Seewiesen, PO Box 1564, D-82305 Starnberg, Germany |
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Abstract: | Cases where less ornamented males are favored through sexualselection are rare among birds. Here we show, based on datafrom 3 consecutive breeding seasons, that male blue tits withless ultraviolet (UV)-ornamented crown feathers sire more offspring.This pattern was mainly driven by the higher success of older,less UV-ornamented males at siring extrapair offspring. Thereason behind this relationship is unclear although we hypothesizethat being less UV-ornamented may enable adult males to intrudeinto nearby territories by mimicking juveniles. To test causality,we experimentally manipulated male crown coloration creating2 groups, one with higher (UV(+) treatment) and one with lowerUV reflectance (UV() treatment). Contrary to our expectations,UV() males were less likely to sire extrapair offspringthan UV(+) males. The treatment had no effect on the likelihoodof losing paternity in a male's own nest. Because the experimentalevidence does not support the observational data, a direct effectof male crown color on extrapair success cannot be confirmed.However, potential pitfalls of this and other such color manipulationexperiments, like fading of treatment with time and mismatchesbetween behavior and coloration, call for new improved manipulationtechniques and detailed behavioral observations to conclusivelytest for the effect of blue tit crown coloration on male extrapairsuccess. |
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Keywords: | color manipulation Cyanistes (Parus) caeruleus extrapair paternity sexual selection ultraviolet. |
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