2006
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2006.3510
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Sex-specific development of cell-mediated immunity under experimentally altered rearing conditions in blue tit nestlings

Abstract: In birds, poor rearing conditions usually have negative effects on T-cell-mediated immune response.However, earlier studies demonstrate that fitness-related traits such as body mass may show sex-specific patterns when subject to alteration of rearing conditions. Therefore, to investigate whether deterioration of rearing conditions influences the development of immune function differently in male and female nestlings, we performed brood size manipulation experiments on blue tit (Parus caeruleus) nestlings. To a… Show more

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Cited by 56 publications
(61 citation statements)
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“…This agrees with most experimental studies on species with large brood sizes (Oddie 2000;Potti et al 2002;Råberg et al 2005;Dubiec et al 2006;Nicolaus et al 2009, but see Tschirren et al 2003;Chin et al 2005) and a few observational studies (Dhondt 1970;Eeva et al 2012, but see Dietrich-Bischoff et al 2008). Our approach was observational and, therefore, a clear demonstration of the causal link was not possible.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 86%
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“…This agrees with most experimental studies on species with large brood sizes (Oddie 2000;Potti et al 2002;Råberg et al 2005;Dubiec et al 2006;Nicolaus et al 2009, but see Tschirren et al 2003;Chin et al 2005) and a few observational studies (Dhondt 1970;Eeva et al 2012, but see Dietrich-Bischoff et al 2008). Our approach was observational and, therefore, a clear demonstration of the causal link was not possible.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 86%
“…For example, the tarsus grows faster than body weight or wing length and reaches a maximum around 10 days old (Royama 1966). In terms of wing length, sex differences in growth strategies have been reported in many studies (Oddie 2000;Råberg et al 2005;Dubiec et al 2006;Nicolaus et al 2009). Since the female is the more dispersing sex, they may invest more in wing length than in body weight under poor conditions (Greenwood 1980).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Thus, we suggest that a sex-specific trade-off between growth and immunity may explain, at least in part, why sons and daughters may not noticeably differ in average measures of immunity. This sexually dimorphic variability in immune function may help to explain greater developmental sensitivity of sons than daughters [26,[57][58][59], and is also consistent with the hypothesis that the quality of sons, particularly in polygynous mating systems, is mediated through size and daughters through immune function. Further studies of sex-biased allocation to offspring and sex-specific variability in the immune system across taxa and contexts may provide insight into the evolution of sexual dimorphism in this trait.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 67%