The evolution of parental care in shorebirds: life histories, ecology, and sexual selection |
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Authors: | Reynolds, John D. Szekely, Tamas |
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Affiliation: | aSchool of Biological Sciences, University of East Anglia Norwich, NR4 7TJ, UK bBehavioural Ecology Research Group, Department of Zoology, Kossuth University Debrecen, H-4010, Hungary |
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Abstract: | Parental care is expected to evolve according to a trade-offbetween the benefits of increased survival of offspring andcosts of reduced survival and future reproduction of adults.Here we investigate the components of this life-history trade-offin shorebirds (Charadriides, excluding Laroidea), an avian infraorderdisplaying an unusual diversity in extent of care by each sex.We show that evolutionary increases in the duration of carein one sex are associated with decreased care by the other.We found no evidence that various hypothesised benefits of careprovide a general explanation for the duration of care by eitheror both sexes, although parental feeding of the young was tooconservative for comparisons. Sexual dimorphism in body sizehad a similar relationship to parental care in both sexes: reductionsin duration of care by either sex were matched by increasesin the size of that sex relative to the other. Whereas thispattern could be explained by sexual selection in males, itwas retained within socially monogamous females. Reduced carein males (but not in females) appears to have facilitated theevolution of greater migration distances. These results suggestthat parental care has had different causes and consequencesin each sex. Benefits of desertion due to sexual selection aremore clearly demonstrable for males, whereas correlates of careare less clear for females |
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Keywords: | Aves body size Charadrii desertion life history migration parental care sexual selection shorebirds. |
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