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Increased extra‐pair paternity in broods of aging males and enhanced recruitment of extra‐pair young in a migratory bird
Authors:E Keith Bowers  Anna M Forsman  Brian S Masters  Bonnie G P Johnson  L Scott Johnson  Scott K Sakaluk  Charles F Thompson
Institution:1. Behavior, Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics Section, School of Biological Sciences, Illinois State University, Normal, Illinois;2. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York;3. Department of Biological Sciences, Towson University, Towson, Maryland
Abstract:Despite keen interest in extra‐pair mating in birds, its adaptive significance remains unresolved. Here, we use a multi‐year dataset to test whether traits of a female's social mate influence her propensity to produce extra‐pair offspring in a population of house wrens, and whether producing extra‐pair young has consequences for a female's fitness through effects on offspring survival. Females were most likely to produce extra‐pair offspring when paired with old males and when paired with males on poor‐quality territories, although this latter effect was marginally nonsignificant. Among offspring, the cutaneous immunity of within‐pair young decreased as the age of their sires increased, but cutaneous immunity of extra‐pair young was not affected by the age of their extra‐pair sires or by the age of the males rearing them. Extra‐pair offspring were more likely than within‐pair offspring to return as breeding adults to the local population, with extra‐pair sons being more likely to return as a breeder for multiple years. Our findings support the hypothesis that females produce extra‐pair offspring to enhance their inclusive fitness beyond what they are capable of given the male with which they are socially paired.
Keywords:Extra‐pair mating  house wren  life history  sex allocation  Troglodytes aedon
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