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1.
Science ; 384(6699): 1030-1036, 2024 May 31.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38815013

RESUMO

Coevolution between interacting species is thought to increase biodiversity, but evidence linking microevolutionary processes to macroevolutionary patterns is scarce. We leveraged two decades of behavioral research coupled with historical DNA analysis to reveal that coevolution with hosts underpins speciation in brood-parasitic bronze-cuckoos. At a macroevolutionary scale, we show that highly virulent brood-parasitic taxa have higher speciation rates and are more likely to speciate in sympatry than less-virulent and nonparasitic relatives. We reveal the microevolutionary process underlying speciation: Hosts reject cuckoo nestlings, which selects for mimetic cuckoo nestling morphology. Where cuckoos exploit multiple hosts, selection for mimicry drives genetic and phenotypic divergence corresponding to host preference, even in sympatry. Our work elucidates perhaps the most common, but poorly characterized, evolutionary process driving biological diversification.


Assuntos
Coevolução Biológica , Mimetismo Biológico , Aves , Especiação Genética , Comportamento de Nidação , Simpatria , Animais , Biodiversidade
2.
Proc Biol Sci ; 283(1843)2016 Nov 30.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27903872

RESUMO

Natural populations might exhibit resilience to changing climatic conditions if they already show adaptive flexibility in their reproductive strategies. In cooperative breeders, theory predicts that mothers with helpers should provide less care when environmental conditions are favourable, but maintain high investment when conditions are challenging. Here, we test for evidence of climate-mediated flexibility in maternal investment in the cooperatively breeding superb fairy-wren Malurus cyaneus We focus on egg size because in this species egg size influences offspring size, and females reduce egg investment when there are helpers at the nest. We report that females lay larger eggs during dry, hot conditions. However, the effect of temperature is modulated by the presence of helpers: the average egg size of females with helpers is reduced during cooler conditions but increased during hot conditions relative to females without helpers. This appears to reflect plasticity in egg investment rather than among female differences. Analysis of maternal survival suggests that helped females are better able to withstand the costs of breeding in hot conditions than females without helpers. Our study suggests that females can use multiple, independent cues to modulate egg investment flexibly in a variable environment.


Assuntos
Clima , Óvulo/fisiologia , Reprodução , Aves Canoras/fisiologia , Animais , Feminino
3.
J Evol Biol ; 27(8): 1522-35, 2014 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24836349

RESUMO

Why do some bird species show dramatic sexual dichromatism in their plumage? Sexual selection is the most common answer to this question. However, other competing explanations mean it is unwise to assume that all sexual dichromatism has evolved by this mechanism. Even if sexual selection is involved, further work is necessary to determine whether dichromatism results from competition amongst rival males, or by female choice for attractive traits, or both. Here, we test whether sexually dichromatic hihi (Notiomystis cincta) plumage is currently under sexual selection, with detailed behavioural and genetic analyses of a free-living island population. Bateman gradients measured for males and females reveal the potential for sexual selection, whilst selection gradients, relating reproductive success to specific colourful traits, show that there is stabilizing selection on white ear tuft length in males. By correlating colourful male plumage with different components of reproductive success, we show that properties of yellow plumage are most likely a product of male-male competition, whilst properties of the black and white plumage are an outcome of both male-male competition and female choice. Male plumage therefore potentially signals to multiple receivers (rival males and potential mates), and this may explain the multicoloured appearance of one of the most strikingly dichromatic species in New Zealand.


Assuntos
Comportamento Competitivo/fisiologia , Plumas/fisiologia , Preferência de Acasalamento Animal/fisiologia , Passeriformes/fisiologia , Pigmentação/fisiologia , Animais , Feminino , Genótipo , Masculino , Repetições de Microssatélites/genética , Modelos Estatísticos , Nova Zelândia , Reprodução/fisiologia
4.
Science ; 342(6165): 1506-8, 2013 Dec 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24357317

RESUMO

The global distribution of cooperatively breeding birds is highly uneven, with hotspots in Australasia and sub-Saharan Africa. The ecological drivers of this distribution remain enigmatic yet could yield insights into the evolution and persistence of cooperative breeding. We report that the global distributions of avian obligate brood parasites and cooperatively breeding passerines are tightly correlated and that the uneven phylogenetic distribution of cooperative breeding is associated with the uneven targeting of hosts by brood parasites. With a long-term field study, we show that brood parasites can acquire superior care for their young by targeting cooperative breeders. Conversely, host defenses against brood parasites are strengthened by helpers at the nest. Reciprocally selected interactions between brood parasites and cooperative breeders may therefore explain the close association between these two breeding systems.


Assuntos
Agressão , Evolução Biológica , Cruzamento , Comportamento Cooperativo , Comportamento de Nidação , Passeriformes/fisiologia , África Austral , Distribuição Animal , Animais , Austrália , Passeriformes/classificação , Filogenia , Vocalização Animal
5.
Ecol Lett ; 13(9): 1114-23, 2010 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20545735

RESUMO

Social immune systems comprise immune defences mounted by individuals for the benefit of others (sensuCotter & Kilner 2010a). Just as with other forms of immunity, mounting a social immune response is expected to be costly but so far these fitness costs are unknown. We measured the costs of social immunity in a sub-social burying beetle, a species in which two or more adults defend a carrion breeding resource for their young by smearing the flesh with antibacterial anal exudates. Our experiments on widowed females reveal that a bacterial challenge to the breeding resource upregulates the antibacterial activity of a female's exudates, and this subsequently reduces her lifetime reproductive success. We suggest that the costliness of social immunity is a source of evolutionary conflict between breeding adults on a carcass, and that the phoretic communities that the beetles transport between carrion may assist the beetle by offsetting these costs.


Assuntos
Anti-Infecciosos/metabolismo , Besouros/fisiologia , Imunidade Coletiva/fisiologia , Comportamento Social , Animais , Cruzamento , Besouros/microbiologia , Exsudatos e Transudatos/fisiologia , Comportamento Alimentar , Feminino , Fertilidade , Larva/fisiologia , Masculino , Testes de Sensibilidade Microbiana , Comportamento Sexual Animal
6.
Proc Biol Sci ; 275(1630): 29-36, 2008 Jan 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17956851

RESUMO

In cooperatively breeding species, parents often use helper contributions to offspring care to cut their own costs of investment (i.e. load-lightening). Understanding the process of load-lightening is essential to understanding both the rules governing parental investment and the adaptive value of helping behaviour, but little experimental work has been conducted. Here we report the results of field experiments to determine maternal provisioning rules in cooperatively breeding superb fairy-wrens (Malurus cyaneus). By manipulating carer: offspring ratios, we demonstrate that helpers allow females to reduce the rate at which they provision their brood. Female reductions, however, were less than that provided by helpers, so that chicks still received food at a faster rate in the presence of helpers. Despite this, chicks fed by parents and helpers were not heavier than those provisioned by parents alone. This is because maternal load-lightening not only occurs during the chick provisioning stage, but also at the egg investment stage. Theoretically, complete load-lightening is predicted when parents value themselves more highly than their offspring. We tested this idea by 'presenting' mothers with a 'choice' between reducing their own levels of care and increasing investment in their offspring. We found that mothers preferred to cut their contributions to brood care, just as predicted. Our experiments help to explain why helper effects on offspring success have been difficult to detect in superb fairy-wrens, and suggest that the accuracy with which theoretical predictions of parental provisioning rules are matched in cooperative birds depends on measuring maternal responses to helper presence at both the egg and chick stages.


Assuntos
Comportamento Cooperativo , Comportamento Materno/fisiologia , Comportamento de Nidação/fisiologia , Aves Canoras/fisiologia , Análise de Variância , Animais , Território da Capital Australiana , Feminino , Fatores Sexuais
7.
Horm Behav ; 52(5): 664-71, 2007 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17915222

RESUMO

Nestling birds solicit food from their parents with vigorous begging displays, involving posturing, jostling and calling. In some species, such as canaries, begging is especially costly because it causes a trade off against nestling growth. Fitness costs of begging like this are predicted by evolutionary theory because they function to resolve conflicts of interest within the family over the provision of parental investment. However, the mechanism that links these costs with nestling behaviour remains unclear. In the present study, we determine if the relationships between nestling androgen levels, nestling begging intensities and nestling growth rates are consistent with the hypothesis that testosterone is responsible for the trade-off between begging and growth. We test this idea with a correlational study, using fecal androgens as a non-invasive method for assaying nestling androgen levels. Our results show that fecal androgen levels are positively correlated with nestling begging intensity, and reveal marked family differences in each trait. Furthermore, changes in fecal androgen levels between 5 and 8 days after hatching are positively associated with changes in nestling begging intensity, and negatively associated with nestling growth during this time. Although these correlational results support our predictions, we suggest that that experimental manipulations are now required to test the direct or indirect role of testosterone in mediating the trade-off between begging and growth.


Assuntos
Canários/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Canários/fisiologia , Comportamento Alimentar/efeitos dos fármacos , Comportamento de Nidação/efeitos dos fármacos , Testosterona/fisiologia , Androgênios/análise , Animais , Fezes/química , Postura/fisiologia , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , Projetos de Pesquisa , Testosterona/análise , Vocalização Animal/fisiologia
8.
Science ; 317(5840): 941-4, 2007 Aug 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17702942

RESUMO

Cooperative breeding systems are characterized by nonbreeding helpers that assist breeders in offspring care. However, the benefits to offspring of being fed by parents and helpers in cooperatively breeding birds can be difficult to detect. We offer experimental evidence that helper effects can be obscured by an undocumented maternal tactic. In superb fairy-wrens (Malurus cyaneus), mothers breeding in the presence of helpers lay smaller eggs of lower nutritional content that produce lighter chicks, as compared with those laying eggs in the absence of helpers. Helpers compensate fully for such reductions in investment and allow mothers to benefit through increased survival to the next breeding season. We suggest that failure to consider maternal egg-investment strategies can lead to underestimation of the force of selection acting on helping in avian cooperative breeders.


Assuntos
Comportamento Animal , Cruzamento , Comportamento Cooperativo , Comportamento de Ajuda , Passeriformes/fisiologia , Animais , Peso Corporal , Tamanho da Ninhada , Ovos , Ingestão de Energia , Feminino , Masculino , Oviposição , Passeriformes/crescimento & desenvolvimento
9.
Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc ; 81(3): 383-406, 2006 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16740199

RESUMO

Avian eggs differ so much in their colour and patterning from species to species that any attempt to account for this diversity might initially seem doomed to failure. Here I present a critical review of the literature which, when combined with the results of some comparative analyses, suggests that just a few selective agents can explain much of the variation in egg appearance. Ancestrally, bird eggs were probably white and immaculate. Ancient diversification in nest location, and hence in the clutch's vulnerability to attack by predators, can explain basic differences between bird families in egg appearance. The ancestral white egg has been retained by species whose nests are safe from attack by predators, while those that have moved to a more vulnerable nest site are now more likely to lay brown eggs, covered in speckles, just as Wallace hypothesized more than a century ago. Even blue eggs might be cryptic in a subset of nests built in vegetation. It is possible that some species have subsequently turned these ancient adaptations to new functions, for example to signal female quality, to protect eggs from damaging solar radiation, or to add structural strength to shells when calcium is in short supply. The threat of predation, together with the use of varying nest sites, appears to have increased the diversity of egg colouring seen among species within families, and among clutches within species. Brood parasites and their hosts have probably secondarily influenced the diversity of egg appearance. Each drives the evolution of the other's egg colour and patterning, as hosts attempt to avoid exploitation by rejecting odd-looking eggs from their nests, and parasites attempt to outwit their hosts by laying eggs that will escape detection. This co-evolutionary arms race has increased variation in egg appearance both within and between species, in parasites and in hosts, sometimes resulting in the evolution of egg colour polymorphisms. It has also reduced variation in egg appearance within host clutches, although the benefit thus gained by hosts is not clear.


Assuntos
Evolução Biológica , Aves/fisiologia , Ovos , Comportamento de Nidação , Pigmentação/fisiologia , Animais , Cadeia Alimentar , Interações Hospedeiro-Parasita , Especificidade da Espécie
10.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 98(20): 11394-8, 2001 Sep 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11572988

RESUMO

Nestling birds solicit food from adults by using begging displays that appear paradoxically costly and wasteful. Theoretical work suggests that the evolution of such exuberant offspring behavior reflects parent-offspring conflict over the supply of parental investment. Originally, extravagant begging was seen as a means of psychological trickery by which offspring could wheedle additional resources from resistant parents. Subsequently, costly begging came to be viewed as the hallmark of resolved parent-offspring conflict, serving either to prevent escalated scramble competition or to enforce honest signaling. However, the theoretical assumption of costly solicitation has been called into question by the low level of energy expenditure measured empirically during begging. This finding has prompted new theoretical work that shows that begging can be cost-free and yet still resolve parent-offspring conflict. Here, I report that begging is more costly than recent work suggests. My experimental evidence from captive canaries demonstrates a marginal cost of begging through impaired growth. Furthermore, I argue that previous studies of energy expenditure during solicitation do not measure the cost of begging, as defined theoretically. More generally, my results may account for the evolution of nestling growth rates, as well as the observation that begging is typically most flamboyant in older offspring.


Assuntos
Canários/fisiologia , Comportamento Alimentar , Comportamento Social , Aumento de Peso , Envelhecimento , Animais , Animais Domésticos , Canários/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Feminino , Masculino , Postura
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