Search results for "paternal care"

showing 10 items of 52 documents

Costs of parasite resistance for female survival and parental care in a freshwater isopod

2006

Parasite resistance is expected to be costly because activation and maintenance of immune system requires energy that will not be available for other fitness related functions. Here, we experimentally exposed gravid female isopods from two lake populations to trophically transmitted acanthocephalan parasite. Successful establishment of the parasite requires penetration to body cavity; therefore, it is likely to induce an immune response. Resistant females from a lake where the parasite occurs as well as from a lake without the parasite experienced higher mortality than susceptible or control females. Parasite exposure reduced the offspring size at birth in both susceptible, but especially, …

IsopodaImmune systembiologyEcologyOffspringZoologyParasite hostingbiology.organism_classificationPaternal careEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsBroodOikos
researchProduct

Coevolution of parental investment and sexually selected traits drives sex-role divergence

2016

Sex-role evolution theory attempts to explain the origin and direction of male–female differences. A fundamental question is why anisogamy, the difference in gamete size that defines the sexes, has repeatedly led to large differences in subsequent parental care. Here we construct models to confirm predictions that individuals benefit less from caring when they face stronger sexual selection and/or lower certainty of parentage. However, we overturn the widely cited claim that a negative feedback between the operational sex ratio and the opportunity cost of care selects for egalitarian sex roles. We further argue that our model does not predict any effect of the adult sex ratio (ASR) that is …

Male0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineTime Factorsparental investmentScienceevoluutioGeneral Physics and AstronomyBiologyModels Biological010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesArticleGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biologysukupuolianisogamy03 medical and health sciencesQuantitative Trait Heritablesex rolesevolutionAnimalsSex RatioOperational sex ratioParental investmenthealth care economics and organizationsCoevolutionSex CharacteristicsMultidisciplinaryQGeneral ChemistrylisääntyminenInvestment (macroeconomics)Biological Evolution030104 developmental biologysukupuolivalintaAnisogamysukupuoliroolitSexual selectionta1181FemalePaternal careSocial psychologysukusolutSex characteristicsNature Communications
researchProduct

Sex roles and the evolution of parental care specialization

2019

Males and females are defined by the relative size of their gametes (anisogamy), but secondary sexual dimorphism in fertilization, parental investment and mating competition is widespread and often remarkably stable over evolutionary timescales. Recent theory has clarified the causal connections between anisogamy and the most prevalent differences between the sexes, but deviations from these patterns remain poorly understood. Here, we study how sex differences in parental investment and mating competition coevolve with parental care specialization. Parental investment often consists of two or more distinct activities (e.g. provisioning and defence) and parents may care more efficiently by s…

Male0106 biological sciencesEvolutionparental investmentsukupuolierotevoluutioyksiavioisuusBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biologymating competitionSexual Behavior Animal03 medical and health sciencesmonogamySpecialization (functional)sex-role reversalAnimalssexual selectionSex RatioMatingParental investmentPhylogeny030304 developmental biologyGeneral Environmental ScienceSex Characteristics0303 health sciencesPhylogenetic inertiaParentingGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologylisääntymiskäyttäytyminenGeneral MedicineMating systemdivision of labourAnisogamysukupuolivalintaEvolutionary biologySexual selectionFemaleGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesPaternal care
researchProduct

Flexible parental care: Uniparental incubation in biparentally incubating shorebirds

2017

The relative investment of females and males into parental care might depend on the population’s adult sex-ratio. For example, all else being equal, males should be the more caring sex if the sex-ratio is male biased. Whether such outcomes are evolutionary fixed (i.e. related to the species’ typical sex-ratio) or whether they arise through flexible responses of individuals to the current population sex-ratio remains unclear. Nevertheless, a flexible response might be limited by the evolutionary history of the species, because one sex may have lost the ability to care or because a single parent cannot successfully raise the brood. Here, we demonstrate that after the disappearance of one pare…

Male0301 basic medicine0106 biological sciencesÞróun lífsinsBehavioural ecologylcsh:MedicineEvolutionary ecology01 natural sciencesNesting BehaviorCharadriiformes[ SDV.EE.IEO ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environment/Symbiosislcsh:Science10. No inequalityIncubationeducation.field_of_studyMultidisciplinaryEcologyEvolutionary theory05 social sciencesAnimal behaviourUmönnunSexual selectionSexual selectionFemaleSex ratioPopulationZoologyBiology010603 evolutionary biologyArticle03 medical and health sciencesEvolutionary ecology ; Evolutionary theory ; Sexual selection ; Animal behaviour ; Behavioural ecologySpecies SpecificityPörunaratferliAnimals0501 psychology and cognitive sciences050102 behavioral science & comparative psychology14. Life underwatereducationEvolutionary theory[ SDE.BE ] Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and EcologyHatchinglcsh:RAtferlisfræðiBrood030104 developmental biologylcsh:QEvolutionary ecology[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and EcologyPaternal care[SDV.EE.IEO]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environment/Symbiosis
researchProduct

When should cuckolded males care for extra-pair offspring?

2012

In socially monogamous species with bi-parental care, males suffer reduced reproductive success if their mate engages in extra-pair copulations (EPCs). One might therefore expect that males should refuse to care for a brood if they can detect that an EPC has occurred. Here, we use a game-theory model to study male brood care in the face of EPCs in a cooperatively breeding species in which offspring help to raise their (half-) siblings in their parents' next breeding attempt. We show that under certain conditions males are selected to care even for broods completely unrelated to themselves. This counterintuitive result arises through a form of pseudo-reciprocity, whereby surviving extra-pair…

MaleGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyReproductive successParentingOffspringGeneral MedicineBiologyModels BiologicalGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyBroodSexual Behavior AnimalCooperative breedingBrood careta1181AnimalsFemaleGenetic FitnessGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesPaternal careSocial psychologyResearch ArticlesGeneral Environmental ScienceDemographyProceedings. Biological sciences
researchProduct

Paternal signature in kin recognition cues of a social insect: concealed in juveniles, revealed in adults

2014

Kin recognition is a key mechanism to direct social behaviours towards related individuals or avoid inbreeding depression. In insects, recognition is generally mediated by cuticular hydrocarbon (CHC) compounds, which are partly inherited from parents. However, in social insects, potential nepotistic conflicts between group members from different patrilines are predicted to select against the expression of patriline-specific signatures in CHC profiles. Whereas this key prediction in the evolution of insect signalling received empirical support in eusocial insects, it remains unclear whether it can be generalized beyond eusociality to less-derived forms of social life. Here, we addressed this…

MaleInsectaTime FactorsKin recognition[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]General Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyForficula auriculariaAnimalsJuvenileInbreeding[SDV.BBM]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biochemistry Molecular BiologyAnimal communicationMaternal BehaviorSocial BehaviorResearch ArticlesComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSGeneral Environmental Science[SDV.EE]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environment[SDV.NEU.PC]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC]/Psychology and behaviorGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologybiologyEcologyReproductionGeneral Medicine16. Peace & justicebiology.organism_classificationEusocialityHydrocarbonsFamily lifeAnimal CommunicationEvolutionary biologyEarwigFemaleCues[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and EcologyGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesPaternal care[SDV.EE.IEO]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Ecology environment/SymbiosisProceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
researchProduct

Transcriptomes of parents identify parenting strategies and sexual conflict in a subsocial beetle

2015

This work was funded by UK NERC grants to M.G.R. and A.J.M. an NERC studentship to D.J.P. the University of Georgia and a US NSF grant to A.J.M. and M.G.R. Parenting in the burying beetle Nicrophorus vespilloides is complex and, unusually, the sex and number of parents that can be present is flexible. Such flexibility is expected to involve specialized behaviour by the two sexes under biparental conditions. Here, we show that offspring fare equally well regardless of the sex or number of parents present. Comparing transcriptomes, we find a largely overlapping set of differentially expressed genes in both uniparental and biparental females and in uniparental males including vitellogenin, ass…

MaleNicrophorus-vespilloidesQH301 BiologyGeneral Physics and AstronomySexual conflictSexual Behavior AnimalSocial-Behaviorparenting strategiesFeeding-behaviorMatingR2Cmedia_commonGeneticskovakuoriaisetMultidisciplinarybiologyFlexibility (personality)Nicrophorus vespilloidesbeetlesNicrophorus vespilloidesColeopteraEvolutionary transitionsBurying beetleFemaleErratumReproductionJuvenile-hormoneHoney-beeBDCOffspringmedia_common.quotation_subjectMolecular Sequence DataGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyQH301Penduline titsAnimalsLife-historySocial BehaviorDrosophila takeout geneQLGene Expression Profilingta1184General ChemistryQL Zoologybiology.organism_classificationEvolutionary biologysexual conflictta1181TranscriptomePaternal careBurying beetles
researchProduct

Sibling cooperation in earwig families provides insights into the early evolution of social life.

2014

The evolutionary transition from solitary to social life is driven by direct and indirect fitness benefits of social interactions. Understanding the conditions promoting the early evolution of social life therefore requires identification of these benefits in nonderived social systems, such as animal families where offspring are mobile and able to disperse and will survive independently. Family life is well known to provide benefits to offspring through parental care, but research on sibling interactions generally focused on fitness costs to offspring due to competitive behaviors. Here we show experimentally that sibling interactions also reflect cooperative behaviors in the form of food sh…

MaleNymphSibling rivalry (animals)InsectaOffspring[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]Developmental psychologyForficula auriculariaCoprophagiaAnimalsSiblingSocial BehaviorComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsbiologyEcology[SDV.BA]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Animal biologydigestive oral and skin physiologybiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionFamily life[SDV.BA.ZI]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Animal biology/Invertebrate ZoologySocial systemEarwigFemalePaternal careThe American naturalist
researchProduct

Aposematism facilitates the diversification of parental care strategies in poison frogs

2021

AbstractMany organisms have evolved adaptations to increase the odds of survival of their offspring. Parental care has evolved several times in animals including ectotherms. In amphibians, ~ 10% of species exhibit parental care. Among these, poison frogs (Dendrobatidae) are well-known for their extensive care, which includes egg guarding, larval transport, and specialized tadpole provisioning with trophic eggs. At least one third of dendrobatids displaying aposematism by exhibiting warning coloration that informs potential predators about the presence of defensive skin toxins. Aposematism has a central role in poison frog diversification, including diet specialization, and visual and acoust…

MalevaroitusväriBehavioural ecologysammakotScienceevoluutioZoologyContext (language use)AposematismBiologyEvolutionary ecologyeläinten käyttäytyminenArticlePredationeriytyminenAnimalsMaternal BehaviorPhylogenyTrophic levelLarvaMultidisciplinaryBehavior AnimallisääntymiskäyttäytyminenBiological MimicryReproductionQRbiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionTadpolePhylogeneticsLarvaEctothermMedicineFemaleAnuraPaternal careScientific Reports
researchProduct

Negative association between parental care and sibling cooperation in earwigs: a new perspective on the early evolution of family life?

2015

International audience; The evolution of family life requires net fitness benefits for offspring, which are commonly assumed to mainly derive from parental care. However, an additional source of benefits for offspring is often overlooked: cooperative interactions among juvenile siblings. In this study, we examined how sibling cooperation and parental care could jointly contribute to the early evolution of family life. Specifically, we tested whether the level of food transferred among siblings (sibling cooperation) in the European earwig F orficula auricularia (1) depends on the level of maternal food provisioning (parental care) and (2) is translated into offspring survival, as well as fem…

NymphInsectaSibling rivalry (animals)genetic structuresOffspringForficula auriculariaAnimalsSiblingMaternal BehaviorParental investmentEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsBehavior AnimalbiologyEcologySiblingsFeeding BehaviorClutch Sizebiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionSurvival AnalysisFamily life[SDV.BA.ZI]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Animal biology/Invertebrate ZoologyFemaleSocial evolutionPaternal careDemography
researchProduct