MALE PARENTAL CARE IN THE ORANGE-TUFTED SUNBIRD - BEHAVIORAL-ADJUSTMENTS IN PROVISIONING AND NEST GUARDING EFFORT

Citation
S. Markman et al., MALE PARENTAL CARE IN THE ORANGE-TUFTED SUNBIRD - BEHAVIORAL-ADJUSTMENTS IN PROVISIONING AND NEST GUARDING EFFORT, Animal behaviour, 50, 1995, pp. 655-669
Citations number
44
Categorie Soggetti
Behavioral Sciences",Zoology,"Behavioral Sciences",Zoology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00033472
Volume
50
Year of publication
1995
Part
3
Pages
655 - 669
Database
ISI
SICI code
0003-3472(1995)50:<655:MPCITO>2.0.ZU;2-S
Abstract
Monogamy is thought to be prevalent in bird species because of the rol e of male parental care, Evolutionarily stable strategies for biparent al cooperation provide a behavioural mechanism for the maintenance of monogamous relationships, under which any shortfall in one parent's wo rk rate is predicted to be partially compensated for by its partner. B oth parents should invest more effort when there are more young. These predictions were tested simultaneously using tail-weights to reduce t he visit rates of female members of pairs of orange-tufted sunbirds, N ectarinia osea, feeding broods of two or three chicks. Prior to the ma nipulation and in unmanipulated control pairs, females provisioned at a greater rate, removed proportionally more faecal sacs and spent long er at the nest, whilst males showed greater nest guarding effort. As p redicted by game theory, males with tail-weighted females compensated incompletely for their partners' lower provisioning rate. Males failed to nest guard when provisioning at high rates, implying an important trade-off for biparental cooperation. Larger broods were fed at a grea ter rate by both parents. Visit rates per chick decreased in experimen tal nests and in larger broods, and this was reflected in lower chick growth rates. Greater chick growth rates per visit in control nests an d larger broods suggest that they received superior load sizes and/or quality of prey. These results concur with previous studies of parenta l responses to partner effort, and further reveal the behavioural flex ibility in provisioning and nest guarding strategies in a species with predominantly female care. (C) 1995 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour