Inheritance and variation in eggshell patterning in the great tit Parus major

Citation
Ag. Gosler et al., Inheritance and variation in eggshell patterning in the great tit Parus major, P ROY SOC B, 267(1461), 2000, pp. 2469-2473
Citations number
32
Categorie Soggetti
Experimental Biology
Journal title
PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF LONDON SERIES B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
ISSN journal
09628452 → ACNP
Volume
267
Issue
1461
Year of publication
2000
Pages
2469 - 2473
Database
ISI
SICI code
0962-8452(200012)267:1461<2469:IAVIEP>2.0.ZU;2-J
Abstract
The inheritance of patterns on avian eggshells is central to understanding the evolution of traits such as egg. mimicry (e.g. in cuckoos). Yet little is known about the inheritance, or indeed function, of eggshell patterns. I t has long been believed that the evolution of eggshell pattern mimicry req uired that patterns be determined by genes situated on the female-specific W chromosome. However, it has never been demonstrated for any bird that egg pattern traits (rather than ground colour) are female sex linked, or indee d that they are inherited. We studied the inheritance of three measures of egg-pigment patterns in a wild great tit population. Egg patterns were fema le specific but unrelated to female attributes such as age or condition and showed only weak environmental effects. Eggs of daughters resembled those of both their mothers and maternal grandmothers, but not of their paternal grandmothers. We conclude that this is the first demonstration of female se x-linked inheritance of avian eggshell patterning, so raising the probabili ty that such a system operates in egg mimics and their hosts.