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Mating Systems 1 • Darwin claimed that the complex structures and elaborate behaviors surrounding animal reproduction were shaped by two mechanisms: > Competition Between Males > Female Choice • The idea of female choice was not widely accepted until the 1970’s • Revived by Gordan Orians and Robert Trivers, among others (Trivers’ Social Evolution) • There are several possible explanations for why females make the choices they do… • Good genes model - male’s appearance, as well as his ability to survive, suggests that he would add these positive traits to your offspring • He must have really good genes • Physiological basis for good genes model • Male bobolinks in good physical condition (measured by body mass/wing length) have longer flight displays • Number of mates correlates with length of flight display (Mather and Robertson 1992) • Clipped wings of males, altered males got fewer mates… • Female barn swallows prefer males with longer tail streamers (Smith et al. 1991) • Tail length in males inversely correlated with ectoparasite load • UV intensity in male plumage of Satin Bowerbird inversely correlated with blood parasite load • Provides an obvious external marker for females to judge mate quality • The handicap model of Amotz Zahavi is a variation on the good genes model • If a male can carry around that enormous tail and still avoid predators, and feed and groom himself, - he must really have his act together • Difference is that in the good genes model, the male’s traits correlate positively with fitness • In the handicap model, the male’s traits correlate negatively with fitness • Female’s choice may be an aesthetic choice • Why else might a female prefer a bright yellow plume on a male bird’s head, or the particular staring eye pattern of the male peacock’s plumes? • This was Darwin’s hypothesis… • Whatever the basis for the female’s choice, once it is made it is self-reinforcing • Birds with a prominent yellow feather on their heads would mate more often than those that lacked one • Might lead to “runaway selection” • Trait is reinforced generation after generation, until it becomes so exaggerated it could become a dangerous burden (R.A. Fisher) • Emlen and Oring (1977) define mating systems as behavioral strategies used to obtain mates, which include > number of mates acquired > way in which mates are acquired > formation and characteristics of pair > patterns of parental care • There are four basic mating systems: > monogamy > polygyny > polyandry > promiscuity • In monogamy, one male mates with one female, forming a pair bond that can endure for a single season or for a lifetime (>90%) • In polygyny, one male mates with several females, while each female only mates with one male (2%) • In polyandry, one female mates with more than one male, while each male only mates with one female (1%) • In promiscuity, males mate indiscriminately with any female, and no pair bond is formed (6%) • Mating systems seem to be shaped by the way in which resources and mates are distributed and exploited • Most birds are monogamous, a mating system that is relatively rare in mammals • Lack (1968) estimates over 90% of bird species are monogamous • Prevalence of monogamy in birds vs. mammals relates to different energetic needs, different roles of the sexes re: young • Traditional viewpoint - monogamy is widespread in birds because birds have such high energetic needs • Female bird, unlike a female mammal, cannot hope to supply those needs by herself, but needs the full-time help of her mate to provide for their young • Birds spend several weeks or months building nests and raising young, unlike fish or turtles or frogs who dump their eggs and leave • Raising baby birds requires a high parental investment • Several forms of monogamy • Some birds actually mate for life - swans, geese, eagles, albatross, petrels, some owls and parrots • Some birds keep the same mate for several seasons before choosing another mate, -robins, tree swallows, mourning doves • Most species, and most passerines, practice serial monogamy - the pair bond only lasts for a single breeding season • Maintaining a pair bond significantly enhances reproductive success • Coulson (1966) conducted an intensive 12 year study on monogamy in kittiwakes (Rissa tridactyla) • Females who kept their mates from prior breeding seasons > bred earlier than other females > laid more eggs > were more successful in fledging young • Mills (1973) found the same to be true for Red-billed Gulls (Larus novaehollandiae) • Changing mates resulted in lower hatching and fledging success • Females are assumed to make the larger parental investment • Making large eggs is energetically more costly than producing sperm • Relative investment of the male varies greatly in monogamous species • Females usually take on primary nesting duties, while the male guards the territory to preserve the resources she will need • Most males also share in provisioning, bringing food to the nest for the incubating female and the young • In herons, egrets, and a few species of woodpeckers, males also share incubation duties • In ground-nesting birds like ducks and geese, males even risk their lives by defending the nest against predators • Genetic analyses of offspring have revealed some interesting facts about supposedly monogamous birds • Many of the young they are raising together are of mixed parentage, representing infidelity on the part of one of the partners • Extra pair copulations (epc’s) are relatively common • EPC = 30-40% of the young of Indigo Buntings and White-crowned Sparrows • EPC = 20% of Red-winged Blackbirds and over 50% of Tree Swallows • Morton (1990) studied purple martins Progne subis, living in 24 compartment martin house in his backyard • Older males got there first in migration, settled into the upper floors - why? • Birds defend 2 or 3 compartments, though only nest in one (male sleeps alone) • Younger males arrive later in the season • Older males take off at dawn, sing a special song whose only purpose is to lure in the juvenile males • Get them to take a lower berth, attract a mate… • Older males averaged 4.5 eggs with their own mates • Luring inexperienced males and moving in on their females = another 3.6 eggs! • 43% of yearling offspring were from EPC’s with older males • Yearlings only managed 8% EPC’s on older male’s mates • Yearlings will mature, move uptown, start the same scam with the next crop of juveniles… • Females seem to be willing participants • If paired with older male, female will tend to avoid EPC’s • If paired with a younger male, will readily accept EPC’s with older males… • Only about 14% of monogamous birds are faithful partners in the usual sense… • Rest resort to EPC’s to greater or lesser extent • Genetic monogamy vs. social monogamy • Although both partners cooperate to raise the young, there are both selfish and altruistic aspects to monogamy • Being selfish, each partner seeks to maximize their individual reproductive success by mating with other partners • Being altruistic, the pair cooperates to rear all the young in their own nest, regardless of parentage • Birds often incubate clutches that contain eggs of mixed parentage • Cliff Swallows, Savannah Sparrows, Eastern Bluebirds, and Common Goldeneyes ex… • Egg dumping - females lay their eggs in other nests of their own species • Monogamy now viewed as less of a sentimental bond between lovers, more of a temporary truce between selfish individuals coming together for a common goal • Males are unable to monopolize females, and so must cooperate with a mate to ensure their own reproductive success • Selecting a mate for a long commitment requires the same sort of critical judgment about mate quality that we use to select our lifelong partners • And, like birds, we sometimes make bad choices and have to start all over • Nothing lasts forever, not even diamonds, and divorce is as much a fact of life among monogamous birds as it is among humans • Fulmars have a divorce rate of about 4% per year, Mute Swans of less than 5% a year • LeResche and Sladen (1970) tagged 37,000 Adelie Penguins, and observed that > younger birds changed mates 44% of the time > older birds only exchanged mates 16% of the time • Not all birds are monogamous… • Many species are polygamous, choosing more than one mate • Of the two forms of polygamy, polygyny is relatively common and polyandry is relatively rare • Both polygyny and polyandry are expected to occur when > either sex is able to monopolize mates > either sex is able to monopolize critical resources that mates need • Evolution of polyandry is an interesting unsolved problem • Polyandry is found in less than 1% of bird species, mainly in some Gruiformes (Button Quails, Roatelos, and a few rails) and in some Charadriiformes (Jacanas, Painted Snipes, phalaropes, a few plovers) • In some polyandrous species, role reversal is nearly complete > females are larger with bright plumage > females compete for males > females are the aggressors in courtship • In some polyandrous species, role reversal is nearly complete > males are smaller and cryptically colored > males incubate the eggs > males drive females away from the nest • Even Audubon was confused, and incorrectly labeled male and female phalaropes in his plates • In North America, Red Phalaropes, Red-necked Phalaropes and Spotted Sandpipers show the usual pattern = sequential polyandry • Females end their relationship with a given male after the eggs are laid, to pursue a new male • Lewis Oring’s long-term study of a population of Spotted Sandpipers (Actitis macularia) nesting on an island in Minnesota • Either sex can evolve the ability to monopolize access to mates or resources those mates need (Oring et al. 1983) • Female Spotted Sandpipers are the dominant sex, outweighing their wimpy mates by 25% • Sandpipers, like many shorebirds, breed in the Arctic, taking advantage of the brief but abundant populations of insects in Spring and Summer • But Spotted Sandpipers breed in the temperate zone • They take advantage of the much longer breeding season to lay additional clutches of eggs • Maximum clutch size for these birds is four eggs per clutch, which equals about 80% of the females’ body weight • So females can’t increase reproductive success by increasing clutch size • Additional young can only come from additional clutches • Even worse, females only live about 3.7 years, and have low nesting success • Because breeding ends in early July when insect populations start to decline, the total breeding season is only 6-7 weeks • Females could lay up to five clutches if they didn’t have to stop and incubate • Females arrive first on the breeding grounds • Females compete for arriving males with intense displays and frequent fights with other females • Once mated, they defend a territory that contains the territories of their male partners • Males are in short supply to begin with • Once males start to incubate, more and more males are tied up incubating eggs • Eventually get up to 6 or 7 females per available male • Even though females could potentially lay up to 20 eggs per season, they are lucky to lay 8 • The older and more experienced females get more mates, lay more eggs, and fledge more young • It’s harder to see what the payoff is for males in polyandry • (Ligon 1993) maybe males, by freeing up females to lay extra clutches, hope to be able to increase their own reproductive success by fertilizing some of those additional eggs • Polygyny is more common in birds, though still limited to about 2% of all species • Many Galliformes are polygynous (grouse, pheasants), ostriches, many species of Icteridae, like Red-winged Blackbirds • Many polygynous birds live in marsh habitats • 11 of 14 North American polygynous species live in marshes or meadow habitats • Females must make a very substantial energetic investment in eggs • Females are also limited in how many eggs they can produce over their lifetime • It is imperative that females select the very best male, and these are usually the males with the highest quality territories • But what if the best males are already taken? • Then females are faced with a tough decision… • Should they select an inferior male and hope for the best, or share a superior male with someone else? • Classic model of polygyny was formulated by Gordon Orians (1969) • Orians proposed that there is a polygyny threshold (#2 on graph), a point past which it is in the female’s best interests to share a male • Polygyny threshold represents the minimum difference between the quality of male territories • If the difference in territory quality is great enough, she will be better off sharing a male in a better territory than pairing with an unmated male on an inferior territory • Verner (1964, 1965) observed female Marsh Wrens frequently choose to share a male, even though there are many bachelor males available • The number of females held by each male correlates with the amount of emergent vegetation on the male’s territory • Amount of emergent vegetation correlates with insect abundance (54% ev = unmated males, 80% ev = monogamous, 95% ev = polygynous) • Dickcissels, Red-winged Blackbirds, and Lark Buntings show similar relationships between territory quality and mating success • Lark Buntings prefer to nest in deep shade • Shade is scarce in their grassland habitats, young birds often die from heat stress • Male Lark Bunting’s with better territories can easily monopolize prime nesting spots • Will accept a second female, who is allowed to mate and nest in the territory • Meanwhile the male spends most of his time and energy helping his primary mate • Polygyny also makes good sense if little effort is needed to raise the young • Gallinaceous birds, with precocious young, are often polygynous • American House Wrens are seldom polygynous (about 6% of matings), but European Wrens are often polygynous (~50%) • European Wrens commonly breed in English gardens, where food is abundant • But on the Scottish island of St. Kilda, where food is very scarce, all the European Wrens are monogamous • It takes both parents to find enough food to raise chicks (Armstrong 1955) • Savannah Sparrows are monogamous in the Arctic tundra, where the breeding season is too short for one parent to find enough food • But they are polygynous in temperate habitats where breeding seasons are longer, and there is a longer window of food abundance • Polygynous males form a temporary pair bond, and make at least some contribution, if only to defend the territory while the female raises the young • But in many polygynous birds, even this fragile pair bond is nonexistent • The male contributes only his sperm and the energetic cost of his display • Such males are promiscuous - about 6% of all bird species (Sage Grouse, Black Grouse, some Birds of Paradise, bowerbirds) • In promiscuous mating systems, males mate with any available female, but females still choose their mates carefully