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Sex-specific parental care during postfledging in common ravens

Ersoy, Selin ; Maag, Nino ; Boehly, Thibault LU orcid ; Boucherie, Palmyre H. and Bugnyar, Thomas (2021) In Animal Behaviour 181. p.95-103
Abstract

Parents face a trade-off when allocating limited resources to reproduction and self-maintenance, and this can result in differential investment in individual offspring when rearing multiple offspring simultaneously. In birds with biparental care, it is not well understood how each parent allocates its resources to different chicks of the same brood. Theory suggests that parental investment depends on offspring quality and brood size, but empirical quantification of parent–offspring interactions during the postfledging stage is often difficult. We worked with captive common ravens, Corvus corax, a slightly dimorphic songbird with extended periods of biparental care, to investigate the effects of offspring sex, body mass, brood age and... (More)

Parents face a trade-off when allocating limited resources to reproduction and self-maintenance, and this can result in differential investment in individual offspring when rearing multiple offspring simultaneously. In birds with biparental care, it is not well understood how each parent allocates its resources to different chicks of the same brood. Theory suggests that parental investment depends on offspring quality and brood size, but empirical quantification of parent–offspring interactions during the postfledging stage is often difficult. We worked with captive common ravens, Corvus corax, a slightly dimorphic songbird with extended periods of biparental care, to investigate the effects of offspring sex, body mass, brood age and brood size on the feeding probability by both parents. We further investigated the influence of the same factors on offspring begging behaviour and affiliative interactions between parent and offspring. Mothers were more likely to feed and affiliate with their offspring than fathers. Fathers were more likely to feed and affiliate with sons than daughters, whereas mothers showed no preference. When more than one son was present, fathers were more likely to feed and affiliate with heavier sons than light sons. Brood size increased the begging probability of chicks, but decreased their probability of being fed. Our results suggest that biparental care in ravens is skewed towards the mother and that paternal care is selective. Selective paternal investment in the heaviest son may be adaptive in a system where heaviest males better compete for resources during dispersal.

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author
; ; ; and
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
biparental care, offspring body mass, offspring sex, parentally biased favouritism, parent–offspring interaction, songbird
in
Animal Behaviour
volume
181
pages
9 pages
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • scopus:85116324259
ISSN
0003-3472
DOI
10.1016/j.anbehav.2021.09.004
language
English
LU publication?
no
additional info
Funding Information: This study was funded by the Austrian Science Fund (FWF) project P29705 to T.B. and P33960-B to T.B. and P.H.B. We thank the teams at the Konrad Lorenz research station and Haidlhof research station for helping with data collection and for tending the study animals. Publisher Copyright: © 2021 The Authors
id
9a8b2658-3e5d-4fac-ac28-1356fdc47bb2
date added to LUP
2021-11-01 11:05:18
date last changed
2022-04-27 05:21:40
@article{9a8b2658-3e5d-4fac-ac28-1356fdc47bb2,
  abstract     = {{<p>Parents face a trade-off when allocating limited resources to reproduction and self-maintenance, and this can result in differential investment in individual offspring when rearing multiple offspring simultaneously. In birds with biparental care, it is not well understood how each parent allocates its resources to different chicks of the same brood. Theory suggests that parental investment depends on offspring quality and brood size, but empirical quantification of parent–offspring interactions during the postfledging stage is often difficult. We worked with captive common ravens, Corvus corax, a slightly dimorphic songbird with extended periods of biparental care, to investigate the effects of offspring sex, body mass, brood age and brood size on the feeding probability by both parents. We further investigated the influence of the same factors on offspring begging behaviour and affiliative interactions between parent and offspring. Mothers were more likely to feed and affiliate with their offspring than fathers. Fathers were more likely to feed and affiliate with sons than daughters, whereas mothers showed no preference. When more than one son was present, fathers were more likely to feed and affiliate with heavier sons than light sons. Brood size increased the begging probability of chicks, but decreased their probability of being fed. Our results suggest that biparental care in ravens is skewed towards the mother and that paternal care is selective. Selective paternal investment in the heaviest son may be adaptive in a system where heaviest males better compete for resources during dispersal.</p>}},
  author       = {{Ersoy, Selin and Maag, Nino and Boehly, Thibault and Boucherie, Palmyre H. and Bugnyar, Thomas}},
  issn         = {{0003-3472}},
  keywords     = {{biparental care; offspring body mass; offspring sex; parentally biased favouritism; parent–offspring interaction; songbird}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{11}},
  pages        = {{95--103}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Animal Behaviour}},
  title        = {{Sex-specific parental care during postfledging in common ravens}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.anbehav.2021.09.004}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.anbehav.2021.09.004}},
  volume       = {{181}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}