Like other 'white' sticklebacks, those ncsting intertidally at Spry Bay, Nova Scotia, Canada, remove fertilized eggs from the nest, disperse them over the surrounding area, and provide no subsequent parental care. However the breeding substrate at Spry Bay is devoid of the filamentous algae which are the normal breeding substrate of the white stickleback and which elsewhere facilitate survival of abandoned embryos. Experiments show that embryos dispersed in the intertidal zone at Spry Bay survive surprisingly well despite the complete absence of parental care and the periodic absence of water. Intertidal embryos generally develop faster than embryos in the adjacent subtidal zone, but there are exceptions to this pattern. Intertidal males show site fidelity to their nests despite interrupted access to territory, and they show consistent preference for nesting in the intertidal zone in the field. In the laboratory, and in the absence of tidal flux and competition, males taken from the rocky intertidal zone generally prefer to breed on bare rock substrate even when filamentous algae are freely available. When white stickleback males from an adjacent population which breeds subtidally in filamentous algae are introduced into the experimental aquaria as competitors, they exclude the males that breed on bare rock. The surprisingly high survivorship of embryos in the rocky intertidal zone, the habitat selection of males for bare substrate, and their exclusion by males that breed subtidally on algae, all suggest that the highly unusual breeding behaviours of intertidal white males form an effective alternative breeding repertoire. Because breeding habitat selection has implications for mate selection, the possibility exists that sticklebacks with different breeding repertoires at Spry Bay may mate assortatively.
Males of the newly discovered 'white' stickleback disperse their embryos over the filamentous algae in which they nest and, unlike any other stickleback, they provide no subsequent parental care. Previously known populations of white sticklebacks nest only in shallow subtidal waters where filamentous algae are abundant. Our purpose in this paper is to describe highly divergent populations at Spry Bay, Nova Scotia, Canada, in which males build nests on bare rock in the subtidal and intertidal zones, and disperse their embryos over bare rock. Intertidal embryos are exposed to air and are vulnerable to desiccation at low tide. Field studies reveal that nests are built from locally available materials directly on the rock substrate. They are constructed very quickly and tend to be less substantial than subtidal nests. Internest distances are shorter in the intertidal zone than in adjacent subtidal areas. Dispersed intertidal embryos tend to settle into crevices between stones where the microenvironment remains moist and temperate between tides due to the presence of organic detritus and shade. Such embryos survive, develop, and hatch. Similar behaviours occur at other sites in Nova Scotia, and we know that it has persisted for at least four years at Spry Bay. We conclude that breeding and dispersing embryos over bare rock substrate, and intertidal breeding, are novel but stable breeding repertoires. We hypothesize that they have evolved secondarily to the evolution of emancipation from parental care in the white stickleback.
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