Sex and environmental sensitivity in blue tit nestlings

Råberg, Lars; Stjernman, Martin; Nilsson, Jan-Åke (2005). Sex and environmental sensitivity in blue tit nestlings. Oecologia, 145, (3), 496 - 503
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DOI:
| Published | English
Authors:
Råberg, Lars ; Stjernman, Martin ; Nilsson, Jan-Åke
Department:
MEMEG
Biodiversity
Evolutionary ecology
Molecular Ecology and Evolution Lab
Ecological and Evolutionary Physiology
Research Group:
Molecular Ecology and Evolution Lab
Ecological and Evolutionary Physiology
Abstract:
In birds and mammals with sexual size dimorphism (SSD), the larger sex is typically more sensitive to adverse environmental conditions, such as food shortage, during ontogeny. However, some recent studies of altricial birds have found that the larger sex is less sensitive, apparently because large size renders an advantage in sibling competition. Still, this effect is not an inevitable outcome of sibling competition, because several studies of other species of altricial birds have found the traditional pattern. We investigated if the sexes differ in environmental sensitivity during ontogeny in the blue tit, a small altricial bird with c. 6% SSD in body mass (males larger than females). We performed a cross-fostering and brood size manipulation experiment during 2 years to investigate if the sexes were differently affected as regards body size (body mass, tarsus and wing length on day 14 after hatching) and pre-fledging survival. We also investigated if the relationship between body size and post-fledging survival differed between the sexes. Pre-fledging mortality was higher in enlarged than in reduced broods, representing poor and good environments, respectively, but the brood size manipulation did not affect the mortality rate of males and females differently. In both years, both males and females were smaller on day 14 after hatching in enlarged as compared to reduced broods. In one of the years, we also found significant Sex x Experiment interactions for body size, such that females were more affected by poor environmental conditions than that of males. Body size was positively correlated with post-fledging survival, but we found no interactive effects of sex and morphological traits on survival. We conclude that in the blue tit, females (the smaller sex) are more sensitive to adverse environmental conditions which, in our study, was manifest in terms of fledgling size. A review of published studies of sex differences in environmental sensitivity in sexually size-dimorphic altricial birds suggests that the smaller sex is more sensitive than the larger sex in species with large brood size and vice versa.
ISSN:
1432-1939
LUP-ID:
73bfad50-ac09-4772-914d-1def47e7781a | Link: https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/73bfad50-ac09-4772-914d-1def47e7781a | Statistics

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