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1 What is the adaptive value of parental care?. 2 6/12/08: Parental care Lecture objectives: 1.Be able to apply a cost-benefit approach to the evolution.

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Presentation on theme: "1 What is the adaptive value of parental care?. 2 6/12/08: Parental care Lecture objectives: 1.Be able to apply a cost-benefit approach to the evolution."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 What is the adaptive value of parental care?

2 2 6/12/08: Parental care Lecture objectives: 1.Be able to apply a cost-benefit approach to the evolution of parental behavior 2.Understand the factors that influence the evolution of adoption and brood parasitism 3.Be familiar with types of parental favoritism, and be able to predict when parent-offspring conflict might occur as well as its outcome

3 3 Parenthood, or taking care of offspring, is hard work Mother's love worth $117,000 per year, study says Stay-at-home moms report working 94.4 hours per week Male Tamarins lose up to ____________ while carrying infants

4 4 There are benefits and costs to parental care Benefits Improved survival of offspring Improved quality of offspring Costs

5 5 Species vary in how much parental care is given Precocial:Altricial:

6 6 Variation in amount of parental care is explained by costs and benefits of care Hypothesis: birds adjust amount of parental care in relation to probability of survival Predictions: P1: N.A. more likely to care for offspringP2: S.A. more likely to care for self

7 7 Variation in amount of parental care is explained by costs and benefits of care Example: Nest defense by parent magpies

8 8 Species vary in which parent provides the majority of care Parental care in shorebirds

9 9 Parental care is generally provided by females… Why? WaterbugRandall’s jawfishStickleback …but not always… Why? Benefits greater for femalesCosts greater for males

10 10 Paternal behavior might evolve when males can ensure paternity Hypothesis: Males are more likely to take care of young if they “think” they’re the dad

11 11 Paternal behavior might evolve when costs are lower for males than for females Do males pay a cost of parenting? Do females pay a cost of parenting? Which gender pays the larger cost?

12 12 To care for their young, parents must recognize their young Mexican free-tailed bats Many colonial species are good at offspring recognition Adoption in Emperor penguins

13 13 Juveniles sometimes seek adoption within their species Gulls Beg confidently So why do parents allow adoption? - Costs might be fairly low in some cases - Offspring recognition is imperfect: If you ignore the begging of a stranger, you might accidentally ignore your offspring

14 14 Parental deception: interspecific brood parasites Cowbird in eastern phoebe nest Common Cuckoo in reed warbler nest

15 15 Brood parasitism is common in cowbirds and cuckoos

16 16 Size (relative to host nestlings) influences a brood parasite’s success If hypothesis (above) is true, which chicks should have a higher survival?

17 17 Why accept a parasite’s egg? 1. Cost-benefit approach Hypothesis: Warblers will be more likely to incubate parasite eggs if there are few new nest sites available Removing an egg might be ____________________ Costs of abandoning a nest might be _____

18 18 Why accept a parasite’s egg? 2. Mafia Hypothesis European great spotted cuckoo If a parasite finds that its offspring have been harmed, it will

19 19 Parental favoritism occurs when parents preferentially care for some offspring over others Hypothesis: Parent coots preferentially feed babies with more orange feathers

20 20 Some parents take favoritism to the extreme by allowing siblicide Great egretBrown boobie

21 21 Parent boobies can control siblicide to some extent Masked booby (MB) Blue-footed booby (BFB) Tendency to prevent siblicide? Tendency to allow siblicide? What do you predict if offspring are in control? If parents are in control?

22 22 Parent-offspring conflict occurs when the interests of parents and offspring are different Example: amount of food to feed offspring

23 23 Class discussion: parent-offspring conflict over siblicide (hypothetical example) 1.Is siblicide adaptive for the juvenile bird? (will siblicide increase its inclusive fitness?) 2.Is allowing siblicide adaptive for the parent bird? 2 offspring, each will have 3 surviving babies If one bird commits siblicide, it will be able to have 5 surviving babies (but loses 3 nephews/nieces) r (parent – offspring) = 0.5 r (uncle/aunt – niece/nephew) = 0.25 r (parent – grandoffspring) = 0.25


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