Data from: Adaptive sex allocation in relation to hatching synchrony and offspring quality in house wrens
Increased variance in the reproductive success of males relative to females favors mothers that optimally allocate sons and daughters to maximize their fitness return. In altricial songbirds, one influence on the fitness prospects of offspring arises through the order in which nestlings hatch from t...
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Zusammenfassung: | Increased variance in the reproductive success of males relative to
females favors mothers that optimally allocate sons and daughters to
maximize their fitness return. In altricial songbirds, one influence on
the fitness prospects of offspring arises through the order in which
nestlings hatch from their eggs, which affects individual mass and size
before nest leaving. In house wrens (Troglodytes aedon), the influence of
hatching order depends on the degree of hatching synchrony, with greater
variation in nestling mass and size within broods hatching asynchronously
than in those hatching synchronously. Early-hatching nestlings in
asynchronous broods were heavier and larger than their later-hatching
siblings and nestlings in synchronous broods. The effect of hatching order
was also sex specific, as the mass of males in asynchronous broods was
more strongly influenced by hatching order than the mass of females, with
increased variation in the mass of males relative to that of females. As
predicted, mothers hatching their eggs asynchronously biased first-laid,
first-hatching eggs toward sons and late-laid, late-hatching eggs toward
daughters, whereas females hatching their eggs synchronously distributed
the sexes randomly among the eggs of their clutch. We conclude that
females allocate the sex of their offspring among the eggs of their clutch
in a manner that maximizes their own fitness. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.8484 |