Age differences in blue tit Parus caeruleus plumage colour: within‐individual changes or colour‐biased survival?
- 23 June 2006
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Avian Biology
- Vol. 37 (4) , 339-348
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.2006.0908-8857.03655.x
Abstract
In many species of passerine birds yearlings display a less elaborate version of the adult secondary sexual traits, but the causes of such differences in ornamentation are not always well understood. We studied age‐related changes in blue tit Parus caeruleus UV/blue structural crown coloration, a sexually selected trait. In our Austrian study population, older blue tits, irrespective of sex, displayed on average a more ultraviolet (lower hue, higher UV chroma), more chromatic and brighter crown coloration than yearlings. This age dichromatism was caused by within‐individual changes in the expression of crown coloration between years since males and females became more UV, more chromatic and brighter as they aged. Colour biased survival did not contribute to the observed pattern of age dichromatism since crown coloration was largely unrelated to overwinter survival. Between‐year repeatability of crown colour was significant for most colour variables but low in general, and lower for females than for males. In the blue tit, yearling males might benefit from being less ornamented by avoiding adult aggression but at the expense of sexual attractiveness. Adaptive explanations of blue tit age dichromatism should however take into account that age effects were of similar magnitude in males and females. This suggests that both male and female yearlings could benefit from being less ornamented and hence that sexual selection might be acting on both sexes simultaneously in this species.Keywords
This publication has 52 references indexed in Scilit:
- Female blue tits adjust parental effort to manipulated male UV attractivenessProceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2004
- The spatial and temporal repeatability of PHA-responsesBehavioral Ecology, 2004
- Plumage colour in nestling blue tits: sexual dichromatism, condition dependence and genetic effectsProceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2003
- A Contrast in Extra‐Pair Paternity Levels on Mainland and Island Populations of Mediterranean Blue TitsEthology, 2003
- Structural coloration and sexual selection in the barn swallow Hirundo rusticaBehavioral Ecology, 2002
- Qualitative population divergence in proximate determination of a sexually selected trait in the collared flycatcherJournal of Evolutionary Biology, 2002
- Carotenoid-based plumage coloration reflects hemoparasite infection and local survival in breeding great titsOecologia, 2001
- Morphology of UV Reflectance in a Whistling-Thrush: Implications for the Study of Structural Colour Signalling in BirdsJournal of Avian Biology, 1999
- Age and plumage related territory differences in male black redstarts: the (non)-adaptive significance of delayed plumage maturationEthology Ecology & Evolution, 1995
- Polygyny in the blue tit: unbalanced sex ratio and female aggression restrict mate choiceAnimal Behaviour, 1994