4.7 Article

Prenatal environmental effects match offspring begging to parental provisioning

Journal

PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Volume 276, Issue 1668, Pages 2787-2794

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2009.0375

Keywords

parental care; maternal effects; parental effects; indirect genetic effects; parent-offspring conflict; egg hormones

Funding

  1. NERC [NER/A/S/2002/00776]
  2. Magdalene College Cambridge
  3. Wolfson Foundation
  4. Royal Society University
  5. Royal Society
  6. Isaac Newton Trust
  7. Newnham College Cambridge
  8. BBSRC [S18938]
  9. Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council [S18938] Funding Source: researchfish
  10. Natural Environment Research Council [NER/A/S/2002/00776] Funding Source: researchfish

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The solicitation behaviours performed by dependent young are under selection from the environment created by their parents, as well as wider ecological conditions. Here we show how mechanisms acting before hatching enable canary offspring to adapt their begging behaviour to a variable post-hatching world. Cross-fostering experiments revealed that canary nestling begging intensity is positively correlated with the provisioning level of their own parents (to foster chicks). When we experimentally increased food quality before and during egg laying, mothers showed higher faecal androgen levels and so did their nestlings, even when they were cross-fostered before hatching to be reared by foster mothers that had been exposed to a standard regime of food quality. Higher parental androgen levels were correlated with greater levels of post-hatching parental provisioning and (we have previously shown) increased faecal androgens in chicks were associated with greater begging intensity. We conclude that androgens mediate environmentally induced plasticity in the expression of both parental and offspring traits, which remain correlated as a result of prenatal effects, probably acting within the egg. Offspring can thus adapt their begging intensity to variable family and ecological environments.

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