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Should I stay or should I go? Female brood desertion and male counterstrategy in rock sparrows
Authors:Griggio  Matteo; Matessi  Giuliano; Pilastro  Andrea
Institution:a Dipartimento di Biologia, Università di Padova, via U. Bassi 58/B, I-35131 Padova, Italy, b Animal Behaviour Group, Biological Department, University of Copenhagen, Tagensvej 16, DK-2200 Copenhagen, Denmark
Abstract:Brood desertion involves a series of interactions between themembers of a pair. This process is likely to be based on eithermember's perception of the other's propensity to desert. Wemanipulated this perception in males by experimentally increasingfemale body mass in the rock sparrow (Petronia petronia), aspecies in which females can desert their first brood beforethe nestlings from the first brood leave the nest. We predictedthat the male would either desert the brood first or stay evenif this implied the risk of caring for the brood alone. We foundthat males mated to loaded females did not leave but stayedand significantly increased their courtship rate and mate guarding.Unexpectedly, they also increased their food provisioning tothe nestlings, even though loaded females did not reduce theirnestling-feeding rate. The increase in male feeding rate maybe explained as a way for the male to reduce the female's propensityto switch mate and desert or to increase her propensity to copulatewith the male to obtain paternity in her next brood. Altogether,our results demonstrate that the perception of the risk of beingdeserted by the female does not necessarily induce males todesert first, contrary to what is generally assumed by theoreticalmodels.
Keywords:courtship  fertility cue  mate guarding  parental care  sexual conflict  
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