2017
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-13005-y
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Flexible parental care: Uniparental incubation in biparentally incubating shorebirds

Abstract: The relative investment of females and males into parental care might depend on the population’s adult sex-ratio. For example, all else being equal, males should be the more caring sex if the sex-ratio is male biased. Whether such outcomes are evolutionary fixed (i.e. related to the species’ typical sex-ratio) or whether they arise through flexible responses of individuals to the current population sex-ratio remains unclear. Nevertheless, a flexible response might be limited by the evolutionary history of the … Show more

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Cited by 23 publications
(46 citation statements)
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References 31 publications
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“…Variation in compensation may then be related to the variation in how often or how soon the partner checks its nest, or to variation in how long a parent waits for its partner to return, that is, the responsiveness to the partner's absence (Figure 4c). Indeed, some permanently widowed parents continued their typical incubation schedule, leaving the nest unattended during their partner's supposed bout, for several days before changing to a uniparental incubation pattern, suggesting that it took some time before they realized that their partner had deserted or at least before they responded to it (see Actograms in Supporting Information (Bulla 2017a) from Bulla et al 2017). This also fits with our observation that more responsive individuals -i.e.…”
Section: Diverse Compensationsupporting
confidence: 84%
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“…Variation in compensation may then be related to the variation in how often or how soon the partner checks its nest, or to variation in how long a parent waits for its partner to return, that is, the responsiveness to the partner's absence (Figure 4c). Indeed, some permanently widowed parents continued their typical incubation schedule, leaving the nest unattended during their partner's supposed bout, for several days before changing to a uniparental incubation pattern, suggesting that it took some time before they realized that their partner had deserted or at least before they responded to it (see Actograms in Supporting Information (Bulla 2017a) from Bulla et al 2017). This also fits with our observation that more responsive individuals -i.e.…”
Section: Diverse Compensationsupporting
confidence: 84%
“…Females might be more sensitive to stress, because they already laid the eggs (typically, a four-egg clutch is laid in five days and has a similar total mass as an average female's body mass; Hicklin & Gratto-Trevor 2010). In semipalmated sandpipers, females also tend to desert the brood before or after hatching (Hicklin & Gratto-Trevor 2010;Bulla et al 2017). However, we found no marked differences between females and males in the level of compensation during the partner's absence (Figure 2), or in postexperimental quality of incubation ( Figure 5).…”
Section: After-experimental Effectsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Western sandpipers breeding later in the season have shortened parental care and stopover duration to reduce predation risk at stopover sites, which suggests there may be a temporal threshold for successful fall migration for sandpipers (Jamieson et al, 2014;Lank et al, 2003;Ydenberg, Butler, Lank, Smith, & Ireland, 2004). If one parent departs more than a few days before the nest hatches, the clutch typically fails (Erckmann, 1981; but see Bulla et al, 2017), so advances in hatching dates may allow parents to successfully hatch a late nest while still meeting the optimal timing for departure on fall migration. (Stevenson & Bryant, 2000).…”
Section: Change Of Incubation Duration Under Climate Coolingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In birds and some other egg-laying species, incubation of eggs is a very important component of parental care with strong ramifications for offspring performance (Deeming and Ferguson 1991;Hepp et al 2015). Even within this one type of care species differ widely in the overall length of incubation, whether and how the sexes share incubation duty, and whether and how often males feed incubating females (e.g., Bulla et al 2017). Similarly, species differ strongly in nest attentiveness, that is, the percentage of daytime eggs are incubated (Conway and Martin 2000b;Deeming 2002;Matysioková et al 2011;Matysioková and Remeš 2014).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%