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Adaptations of Polygynous Breeding in the Bobolink, Dolichonyx oryzivorus
Authors:MARTIN   STEPHEN G.
Affiliation:Department of Zoology, Oregon State University Corvallis, Oregon 97331 Department of Zoology and Entomology, Colorado State University Fort Collins, Colorado 80521
Abstract:In some species of polygynous songbirds, males assist in feedingnestlings of their first (primary) female but ignore offspringof subsequent (secondary) mates. A number of adaptations importantin minimizing the disadvantages of a secondary status in femaleBobolinks (Dolichonyx oryzivorus) have been discovered. In Bobolinks, clutches of secondary females are significantlysmaller than those of primary females, thereby adjusting broodsize to correspond better with food delivery capabilities ofsecondary hens. Commencement of incubation with deposition ofthe penultimate egg allows additional brood size adjustment,for the resulting hatching asynchronism promotes efficient cullingof the late-hatching chick in times of food shortage, withoutendangering the entire brood. Secondary females differ fromprimary pairs in food exploitation techniques by capitalizingon insects found close to the nest and by showing less discriminationin food selection. Such behavior permits compensation in therate of food delivery trips to secondary nestlings so as toequal the tempo maintained by both members of the primary pair,yet results in quantitative disparities in food brought to primaryand secondary nestlings. Flexibility in male feeding responses,resulting in partial male assistance at secondary nests in situationswhere secondary brood size is exceptionally large, is also importantin helping to maximize the reproductive performance of birdsengaging in this mating strategy.
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