No evidence of genetic benefits from extra-pair fertilisations in female sand martins (Riparia riparia) |
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Authors: | Jakob Augustin Donald Blomqvist Tibor Szép Zoltán D. Szabó Richard H. Wagner |
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Affiliation: | (1) Konrad Lorenz Institute for Ethology, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Savoyenstrasse 1a, Vienna, 1160, Austria;(2) Department of Zoology, University of Gothenburg, Box 463, Gothenburg, 405 30, Sweden;(3) Department of Environmental Sciences, College of Nyíregyháza, Nyíregyháza, 4401, Hungary;(4) Department of Systematics and Ecology, Babes-Bolyai University, Cluj, 400006, Romania |
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Abstract: | Genetic parentage studies of socially monogamous birds reveal a widespread prevalence of extra-pair paternity. Variation in extra-pair paternity among individuals may depend on how different individuals benefit from extra-pair fertilisations and on the opportunity to pursue extra-pair copulations. A long-term study of sand martins (Riparia riparia) in Hungary allowed us to examine patterns of extra-pair fertilisations in a large colony of over 3,000 breeding pairs with many known age individuals. We used multi-locus DNA fingerprinting to determine whether extra-pair fertilisations occur when females are paired to (1) presumably low quality mates, or (2) genetically similar or dissimilar mates, and whether extra-pair fertilisations result in offspring of higher quality. Extra-paternal young were found in 38% of 47 broods and comprised 19% of 190 offspring. Males that lost paternity did not differ significantly from others in age or body condition. Social mates of broods containing extra-pair offspring did not differ in genetic similarity from pairs without extra-pair offspring. Furthermore, there was no significant difference in body condition between extra-pair young and their maternal half-siblings. We were unable to assign paternity and therefore cannot exclude the possibility that extra-pair males differed from the within-pair males they cuckolded, in age, body condition or genetic similarity with the female. We found a positive relationship between paternity losses and breeding density, suggesting that low breeding density may constrain opportunities for seeking extra-pair copulations. |
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Keywords: | Breeding density Coloniality Extra-pair paternity Genetic similarity |
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