2011
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2010.2594
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Sense and sensitivity: responsiveness to offspring signals varies with the parents' potential to breed again

Abstract: How sensitive should parents be to the demands of their young? Offspring are under selection to seek more investment than is optimal for parents to supply, which makes parents vulnerable to losing future fitness by responding to manipulative displays. Yet, parents cannot afford to ignore begging and risk allocating resources inefficiently. Here, we show that parents may solve this problem by adjusting their sensitivity to begging behaviour in relation to their own likelihood of breeding again, a factor largely… Show more

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Cited by 42 publications
(38 citation statements)
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“…For example, European starlings can lay two broods per year, and offspring only signal need honestly if they are in the second brood, when parents cannot lay another brood (49). Hihi bird parents' response to offspring signals in their first brood decreases if their likelihood of breeding again is experimentally increased (50).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…For example, European starlings can lay two broods per year, and offspring only signal need honestly if they are in the second brood, when parents cannot lay another brood (49). Hihi bird parents' response to offspring signals in their first brood decreases if their likelihood of breeding again is experimentally increased (50).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These results suggest that siblings that are not even born yet, and, indeed, may never be born, cast a competitive shadow back in time, which selects for exaggerating need to parents. The logical next step would be to explore how parents' response to begging is affected by the same life history factors (6,49,50,58). Longevity and lifetime fecundity have already been shown to influence other aspects of parental care, such as how parents respond to nest predators, with species that have less potential for future reproduction engaging in riskier defense behavior (59).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition to these physiological functions, carotenoids are also allocated into carotenoid-based signals (e.g., plumage) in developing animals Isaksson et al, 2006). Such signaling is crucial because it is used by parents to assess the viability/quality of the chicks and therefore to determine their parental investment (Saino et al, 2003a;Pike et al, 2007;Thorogood et al, 2011). Therefore, carotenoids mediate a tradeoff between protective physiological functions (e.g., immunity, growth, and antioxidants) and signaling in developing animals.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The use of number of breeding events as indicative of intrinsic costs of reproduction and of probability of reproducing several times during the same season as a proxy of individual phenotypic quality of adults is not new (Thorogood et al 2011). Probability of laying subsequent clutches is related to experimental food supply (Nagy and Holmes 2005a;Thorogood et al 2011;Seward et al 2014) and/or to intrinsic phenotypic quality of adults (Hoffmann et al 2015) and, on average, nestlings of multi-brooded females are of better phenotypic quality than those from single-brooded (Nagy and Holmes 2005b).…”
Section: Appropriateness Of Using the Number Of Breeding Attempts As mentioning
confidence: 99%