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The cost of parental care: prey hunting in a digger wasp 总被引:4,自引:2,他引:2
Trivers's concept of parental investment is an integral partof modern evolutionary biology. "Parental investment" is definedas any parental expenditure that benefits a current progenyat the expense of a parent's ability to reproduce in the future.Because future costs are hard to quantify, other currencieswere used that were thought to be related to the actual costs.However, the validity of these alternative measures has rarely
been established, at least in insects. Specifically, these measureswere not shown to represent costs at all. We investigated provisioningbehavior in a sphecid wasp, the European beewolf, Philanthustriangulum F., and tested whether prey hunting entails futurecosts to the female wasp and thus represents parental investment.We increased as well as decreased the females' hunting effortexperimentally and determined their hunting success on the
following day. Furthermore, we analyzed the correlation betweenhunting rate of unrestricted females and their life span andassessed the effect of an experimentally decreased huntingeffort on life span. The future rate of bee hunting decreasedwhen hunting expenditure was increased (in the field) and viceversa (both in the field and in the laboratory). In contrast,
there was no trade-off between hunting rate and life span, andlife span was not affected by an experimentally decreased huntingeffort (in the laboratory). Because prey hunting entails costsin terms of a reduced rate of prey hunting in the future, itmeets Trivers' definition of parental investment. 相似文献
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Barbara Regaiolli Chiara Angelosante Giovanna Marliani Pier Attilio Accorsi Stefano Vaglio Caterina Spiezio 《Zoo biology》2020,39(2):73-82
Tamarins and marmosets are small-bodied social callitrichines. Wild callitrichines feed on exudates, such as sap and gum; particularly, marmosets are mainly gummivores, while tamarins consume gums only occasionally and opportunistically. Zoo marmosets and tamarins are usually provided with gum arabic as an alternative to the exudates normally found in the wild. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effects of a gum feeder on the behavior and well-being of four zoo-managed callitrichines. We studied four cotton-top tamarins (Saguinus oedipus), four red-handed tamarins (S. midas), two pygmy marmosets (Cebuella pygmaea), and three Geoffroy's marmosets (Callithrix geoffroyi) housed at Parco Natura Viva (Italy). We conducted the study over two different periods, a baseline (control, without the gum feeder) and then a gum feeder (when the gum feeder was provided) period. We used continuous focal animal sampling to collect behavioral data, including durations of social and individual behaviors. We collected 240 min of observations per period per study subject, with a total of 3,120 min for all the subjects in the same period and of 6,240 min in both periods. We analyzed data by using nonparametric statistical tests. First, we found that the gum feeder promoted species-specific behaviors, such as exploration, and diminished self-directed behaviors, suggesting an enriching effect on tamarin and marmoset behavior. Moreover, in red-handed tamarins, the provision of the gum feeder reduced the performance of self-directed and abnormal behavior, specifically coprophagy. These results confirm that gum feeders are effective foraging enrichment tools for zoo marmosets and tamarins. 相似文献
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Albanese Valeria Kuan Michela Accorsi Pier Attilio Berardi Roberta Marliani Giovanna 《Primates; journal of primatology》2021,62(4):585-593
Primates - Long-tailed macaques are highly social primates that are commonly used in biomedical research as animal models. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effects of different kinds of... 相似文献
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