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Viability Is Associated with Melanin-Based Coloration in the Barn Swallow (Hirundo rustica)
Authors:Nicola Saino  Maria Romano  Diego Rubolini  Roberto Ambrosini  Manuela Caprioli  Aldo Milzani  Alessandra Costanzo  Graziano Colombo  Luca Canova  Kazumasa Wakamatsu
Affiliation:1. Department of Biosciences, University of Milan, Milan, Italy.; 2. Department of Biotechnology and Biosciences, University of Milano-Bicocca, Milan, Italy.; 3. Dipartimento di Biologia e Biotecnologie, Università degli Studi di Pavia, Pavia, Italy.; 4. Department of Chemistry, Fujita Health University School of Health Sciences, Toyoake, Aichi, Japan.; University of Lausanne, Switzerland,
Abstract:Pigmentation of body surface in animals can have multiple determinants and accomplish diverse functions. Eumelanin and pheomelanin are the main animal pigments, being responsible of yellow, brownish-red and black hues, and have partly common biosynthetic pathways. Many populations of vertebrates show individual variation in melanism, putatively with large heritable component. Genes responsible for eu- or pheomelanogenesis have pleiotropic but contrasting effects on life-history traits, explaining the patterns of covariation observed between melanization and physiology (e.g. immunity and stress response), sexual behavior and other characters in diverse taxa. Yet, very few studies in the wild have investigated if eu- and pheomelanization predict major fitness traits like viability or fecundity. In this correlative study, by contrasting adult barn swallows (Hirundo rustica) matched for age, sex, breeding site, and year and date of sampling, we show that males but not females that survived until the next year had paler, relatively more eu- than pheomelanic pigmentation of ventral body feathers. Better performance of individuals that allocate relatively more to eumelanogenesis was expected based on previous evidence on covariation between eumelanic pigmentation and specific traits related to immunity and susceptibility to stress. However, together with the evidence of no covariation between viability and melanization among females, this finding raises the question of the mechanisms that maintain variation in genes for melanogenesis. We discuss the possibility that eu- and pheomelanization are under contrasting viability and sexual selection, as suggested by larger breeding and sperm competition success of darker males from other barn swallow subspecies.
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