Jj. Negro et al., REGULATION OF INTEGUMENTARY COLOR AND PLASMA CAROTENOIDS IN AMERICAN KESTRELS CONSISTENT WITH SEXUAL SELECTION THEORY, Functional ecology, 12(2), 1998, pp. 307-312
1. Sexually selected traits are expected to vary seasonally, with the
maximal expression of the character being evident during mate choice;
however, the mechanisms controlling or regulating such traits are gene
rally poorly known. 2. Carotenoid pigments responsible for bright red
or yellow coloration in the feathers, skin or other integumentary stru
ctures of birds are generally believed to Vary seasonally because of d
iet. 3. Variation in carotenoid-dependent skin colour between winter a
nd spring (mating season) was investigated, as was variation in plasma
carotenoids across the breeding season in captive American Kestrels,
Falco sparverius, fed a uniform diet. 4. Kestrels were more brightly c
oloured in the mating period than in winter, and plasma carotenoid con
centrations declined from the time of mating to the rearing of young.
5. Although carotenoid levels were highly sexually dimorphic during ma
ting and laying, males and both breeding and non-breeding females all
had similar levels by the incubation period, and the pattern of variat
ion over time suggests rheostatic regulation. 6. These results suggest
kestrels may have the ability to regulate (rather than merely control
) their colour physiologically, the variation in colour and carotenoid
s is consistent with that expected of a sexually selected trait, and t
he loss of colour after breeding may suggest a trade-off between the s
how and health functions of carotenoids.