4.5 Article

The evolution of extra-pair paternity and paternal care in birds

Journal

BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/beheco/arad053

Keywords

extra-pair paternity; incubation; life history; nestbuilding; parental care; phylogenetic path analysis; provisioning

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Extra-pair paternity negatively affects paternal care in bird species, as shown by our study on 271 socially monogamous species.
Extra-pair paternity (EPP) influences the relatedness between social parents and offspring. Therefore, one might expect the level of EPP to influence levels of paternal investment. Here, we investigated the effect of variation in EPP rates on male contributions to parental care within a phylogenetic framework of up to 271 primarily socially monogamous bird species representing 85 families. We used proportion of male provisioning and occurrence of male incubation and nestbuilding as measures of paternal care. We tested the relationship between EPP rates and different components of paternal care while controlling for various life-history traits, namely lifespan, clutch size, and body mass in a phylogenetic path analysis framework. EPP was significantly negatively associated with the occurrence (i.e., whether males participate or not) of male nestbuilding and incubation, but not with the relative amount (proportion) of nestbuilding or incubation performed by the male. Importantly, the proportion of provisioning and biomass delivery by males was clearly negatively associated with EPP. These analyses thus confirm that the effect of EPP on proportion of provisioning visits by males is similar to proportion of biomass delivery, an often assumed but rarely tested assumption. Analysing only Passerine species provided similar results, although only proportion of provisioning was significantly negatively associated with EPP. This study, therefore, provides the most comprehensive support to date of a negative relationship between EPP and paternal care across species. However, a causal relationship between EPP and paternal care cannot necessarily be concluded. We also identify key methodological improvements for future research within the topic. Birds need to take care of their young. Such parental care can be done by both parents, and include various forms of care like nestbuilding, incubation and provisioning. In species with higher levels of extra-pair paternity, where males other than the social father sire offspring, the level of care provided by the male is expected to be lower. Here we show support for this hypothesis, and confirm previous assumptions.

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