Facultative sex ratio bias in the offspring of Seychelles warblers
- 22 May 1996
- journal article
- Published by The Royal Society in Proceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences
- Vol. 263 (1370) , 661-666
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.1996.0099
Abstract
Young Seychelles warblers (Acrocephalus sechellensis) frequently remain in their natal territories as helpers. Helpers on low-quality territories (as measured by food availability) reduce their parents' future reproductive success, whereas helpers on high-quality territories increase their parents' future reproductive success, thereby improving their own indirect component of inclusive fitness. Helpers are mainly females, which remain longer in their natal territories than males. The Seychelles warbler shows extreme skews in sex ratios of offspring at six months of age, varying from mainly males on low-quality territories to mainly females on high-quality territories. It appears that breeding birds avoid having helpers on low-quality territories and gain helpers on high-quality territories, thereby increasing their reproductive success. There is evidence that the biased sex ratio is caused by biased production, and not because of biased mortality at younger ages: (i) cumulative mortality from the egg stage to the stage at six months of age is insufficient to generate a consistent deviation from sex ratio parity; (ii) all 30 nestlings produced by two pairs on low-quality territories survived to be sexed as sons, and all nestlings produced by two pairs on high-quality territories survived to be sexed as 17 daughters and one son; and (iii) in addition, breeding pairs that were transferred from low- to high-quality territories, switched from the production of male to female nestlings.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Skewed Brood Sex Ratio and Sex-Biased Hatching Sequence in Harris's HawksThe American Naturalist, 1991
- Adaptive Seasonal Variation in the Sex Ratio of Kestrel BroodsFunctional Ecology, 1990
- Dispersal and the sex ratio at birth in primatesNature, 1988
- Sex Ratio Variation in MammalsThe Quarterly Review of Biology, 1986
- Sex ratio variation in birdsIbis, 1986
- Sex-Ratio Selection in Species with Helpers-At-The-NestThe American Naturalist, 1986
- Sex Ratios of Nestling and Fledgling Red-Cockaded Woodpeckers (Picoides borealis) Favor MalesThe American Naturalist, 1985
- Maternal dominance, breeding success and birth sex ratios in red deerNature, 1984
- Parental investment in male and female offspring in polygynous mammalsNature, 1981
- Sex-Ratio Adjustment in the Common GrackleScience, 1977