Extrapair paternity alongside social reproduction increases male lifetime fitness
Dunning J, Sanchez-Tojar A, Girndt A, Burke T, Hsu Y-H, Nakagawa S, Winney I, Schroeder J (2024)
Animal Behaviour 213: 117-123.
Zeitschriftenaufsatz
| Veröffentlicht | Englisch
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Autor*in
Dunning, Jamie;
Sanchez-Tojar, AlfredoUniBi ;
Girndt, AntjeUniBi;
Burke, Terry;
Hsu, Yu-Hsun;
Nakagawa, Shinichi;
Winney, Isabel;
Schroeder, Julia
Einrichtung
Abstract / Bemerkung
Within breeding years, male birds vary in their reproductive strategy. While some maintain monogamy with a social partner, others also engage with extrapair partners, while others forgo monogamy altogether in favour of exclusively seeking extrapair paternity. Although theory predicts that extrapair paternity is beneficial to males, which sire extrapair offspring without investing in costly parental care, empirical examples from wild populations are sparse. We used 17 years of data from a closed population of house sparrows, Passer domesticus, with a complete genetic pedigree, to test the hypothesis that extrapair paternity increases male lifetime reproductive success. We compared a mixed strategy of within-pair (or social) and extrapair paternity with total genetic monogamy and total extrapair paternity. We demonstrate that males who combine within-pair and extrapair paternity have increased reproductive success against the other two groups. Our results also suggest that males that exclusively seek extrapair paternity have the lowest lifetime fitness. Overall, we provide an empirical demonstration of the theory, showing that where males can sire extrapair offspring alongside within-pair offspring, extrapair paternity is beneficial to male lifetime fitness. (c) 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd on behalf of The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/ by/4.0/).
Stichworte
avian reproduction;
behavioural ecology;
extrapair reproduction;
floating male;
genetic pedigree;
house sparrow;
lifetime fitness
Erscheinungsjahr
2024
Zeitschriftentitel
Animal Behaviour
Band
213
Seite(n)
117-123
ISSN
0003-3472
eISSN
1095-8282
Page URI
https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/2990775
Zitieren
Dunning J, Sanchez-Tojar A, Girndt A, et al. Extrapair paternity alongside social reproduction increases male lifetime fitness. Animal Behaviour. 2024;213:117-123.
Dunning, J., Sanchez-Tojar, A., Girndt, A., Burke, T., Hsu, Y. - H., Nakagawa, S., Winney, I., et al. (2024). Extrapair paternity alongside social reproduction increases male lifetime fitness. Animal Behaviour, 213, 117-123. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.anbehav.2024.04.007
Dunning, Jamie, Sanchez-Tojar, Alfredo, Girndt, Antje, Burke, Terry, Hsu, Yu-Hsun, Nakagawa, Shinichi, Winney, Isabel, and Schroeder, Julia. 2024. “Extrapair paternity alongside social reproduction increases male lifetime fitness”. Animal Behaviour 213: 117-123.
Dunning, J., Sanchez-Tojar, A., Girndt, A., Burke, T., Hsu, Y. - H., Nakagawa, S., Winney, I., and Schroeder, J. (2024). Extrapair paternity alongside social reproduction increases male lifetime fitness. Animal Behaviour 213, 117-123.
Dunning, J., et al., 2024. Extrapair paternity alongside social reproduction increases male lifetime fitness. Animal Behaviour, 213, p 117-123.
J. Dunning, et al., “Extrapair paternity alongside social reproduction increases male lifetime fitness”, Animal Behaviour, vol. 213, 2024, pp. 117-123.
Dunning, J., Sanchez-Tojar, A., Girndt, A., Burke, T., Hsu, Y.-H., Nakagawa, S., Winney, I., Schroeder, J.: Extrapair paternity alongside social reproduction increases male lifetime fitness. Animal Behaviour. 213, 117-123 (2024).
Dunning, Jamie, Sanchez-Tojar, Alfredo, Girndt, Antje, Burke, Terry, Hsu, Yu-Hsun, Nakagawa, Shinichi, Winney, Isabel, and Schroeder, Julia. “Extrapair paternity alongside social reproduction increases male lifetime fitness”. Animal Behaviour 213 (2024): 117-123.
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