4.6 Article

Consequences of nest site selection vary along a tidal gradient

期刊

JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY
卷 90, 期 2, 页码 528-541

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2656.13385

关键词

environmental gradient; fitness trade‐ offs; parental care; plainfin midshipman; reproductive strategies; reproductive success

资金

  1. American Museum of Natural History
  2. Sigma Xi [G2018031596198752]
  3. Animal Behavior Society
  4. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada [USRA-5252432018, RGPIN-2016-05772, 533427-2018]
  5. McMaster University
  6. Department of Psychology, Neuroscience, Behaviour
  7. Liber Ero Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study shows that different nesting sites have implications for the physiological costs for parents and developmental benefits for offspring in the plainfin midshipman fish. It is found that parents choosing low intertidal nests can effectively improve offspring survival and development rates, while high intertidal nests lead to faster offspring development but higher mortality rates.
Parents providing care must sometimes choose between rearing locations that are most favourable for offspring versus those that are most favourable for themselves. Here, we measured how both parental and offspring performance varied in nest sites distributed along an environmental gradient. The plainfin midshipman fish Porichthys notatus nests along a tidal gradient. When ascending from the subtidal to the high intertidal at low tide, both nest temperature and frequency of air exposure increase. We used one lab and two field experiments to investigate how parental nest site choices across tidal elevations are linked to the physiological costs incurred by parents and the developmental benefits accrued by offspring. Under warmer incubation conditions, simulating high intertidal nests, offspring developed faster but had higher mortality rates compared to those incubated in cooler conditions that mimicked subtidal nests. In the field, males in higher intertidal nests were more active caregivers, but their young still died at the fastest rates. Larger males claimed and retained low intertidal nests, where offspring survival and development rates were also highest. Our results suggest that males compete more intensively for nest sites in the low intertidal, where they can raise their young quickly and with lower per-offspring investments. Smaller, less-competitive males forced into higher intertidal sites nest earlier in the season and provide more active parental care, possibly to bolster brood survival under harsh environmental conditions.

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