Pre-hatch and post-hatch brood amalgamation in North American Anatidae: a review of hypotheses

1988 ◽  
Vol 66 (8) ◽  
pp. 1709-1721 ◽  
Author(s):  
John McA. Eadie ◽  
F. Patrick Kehoe ◽  
Thomas D. Nudds

Two forms of brood amalgamation occur frequently in several species of North American waterfowl: (i) pre-hatch brood amalgamation, whereby a female lays her eggs in the nest of another female and the recipient thereafter provides all further care of the eggs and resulting offspring, and (ii) post-hatch brood amalgamation, whereby a female abandons or loses her young to another female after hatch, and the recipient subsequently tends the foster young. Some authors have viewed these behaviours as accidental or aberrant and of little evolutionary significance. More recently, a number of alternative hypotheses have been suggested. However, few of these hypotheses have been contrasted as viable alternatives and tested in the field, largely because an appropriate theoretical framework is lacking. We analyze the frequency of occurrence of brood amalgamation in North American anatids. We also review the hypotheses that have been proposed to explain these behaviours and erect a theoretical framework which applies to the evolution of both pre-hatch and post-hatch brood amalgamation, and which may apply to species other than those of the Anatidae. Finally, we show that the occurrence of brood amalgamation in North American waterfowl may be associated with low relative resource availability and K-type life-history traits.

2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (5) ◽  
pp. 2632-2644 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul G. Harnik ◽  
Hafiz Maherali ◽  
Joshua H. Miller ◽  
Paul S. Manos

1988 ◽  
Vol 66 (8) ◽  
pp. 1906-1912 ◽  
Author(s):  
Todd W. Arnold

Recently, Zammuto (R. M. Zammuto. 1986. Can. J. Zool. 64: 2739–2749) suggested that North American game birds exhibited survival–fecundity trade-offs consistent with the "cost of reproduction" hypothesis. However, there were four serious problems with the data and the analyses that Zammuto used: (i) the species chosen for analysis ("game birds") showed little taxonomic or ecological uniformity, (ii) the measures of future reproductive value (maximum longevity) were severely biased by unequal sample sizes of band recoveries, (iii) the measures of current reproductive effort (clutch sizes) were inappropriate given that most of the birds analyzed produce self-feeding precocial offspring, and (iv) the statistical units used in the majority of analyses (species) were not statistically independent with respect to higher level taxonomy. After correcting these problems, I found little evidence of survival–fecundity trade-offs among precocial game birds, and I attribute most of the explainable variation in life-history traits of these birds to allometry, phylogeny, and geography.


2013 ◽  
Vol 182 (6) ◽  
pp. 760-774 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anna Kostikova ◽  
Glenn Litsios ◽  
Nicolas Salamin ◽  
Peter B. Pearman

2021 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrea J. Roth-Monzón ◽  
Mark C. Belk ◽  
J. Jaime Zúñiga-Vega ◽  
Jerald B. Johnson

Life-history traits are directly linked to fitness, and therefore, can be highly adaptive. Livebearers have been used as models for understanding the evolution of life histories due to their wide diversity in these traits. Several different selective pressures, including population density, predation, and resource levels, can shape life-history traits. However, these selective pressures are usually considered independently in livebearers and we lack a clear understanding of how they interact in shaping life-history evolution. Furthermore, selective pressures such as interspecific competition are rarely considered as drivers of life-history evolution in poeciliids. Here we test the simultaneous effects of several potential selective pressures on life-history traits in the livebearing fish Poeciliopsis prolifica. We employ a multi-model inference approach. We focus on four known agents of selection: resource availability, stream velocity, population density, and interspecific competition, and their effect on four life-history traits: reproductive allocation, superfetation, number of embryos, and individual embryo size. We found that models with population density and interspecific competition alone were strongly supported in our data and, hence, indicated that these two factors are the most important selective agents for most life-history traits, except for embryo size. When population density and interspecific competition increase there is an increase in each of the three life-history traits (reproductive allocation, superfetation, and number of embryos). For individual embryo size, we found that all single-agent models were equivalent and it was unclear which selective agent best explained variation. We also found that models that included population density and interspecific competition as direct effects were better supported than those that included them as indirect effects through their influence on resource availability. Our study underscores the importance of interspecific competitive interactions on shaping life-history traits and suggests that these interactions should be considered in future life-history studies.


Author(s):  
Maggie Hantak ◽  
Bryan McLean ◽  
Daijiang Li ◽  
Robert Guralnick

Anthropogenically-driven climate warming is a hypothesized driver of animal body size reductions. Less understood are effects of other human-caused disturbances on body size, such as urbanization. We compiled 140,499 body size records of over 100 North American mammals to test how climate and urbanization, and their interactions with species traits, impact body size. We tested three hypotheses of body size change across urbanization gradients; urban heat island effects, fragmentation, and resource availability. Our results unexpectedly demonstrate urbanization is more tightly linked with body size changes than temperature, most often leading to larger individuals, thus supporting the resource availability hypothesis. In addition, life history traits, such as thermal buffering, activity time, and average body size play critical roles in mediating the effects of both climate and urbanization on intraspecific body size trends. This work highlights the value of using digitized, natural history data to track how human disturbance drives morphological change.


1986 ◽  
Vol 64 (12) ◽  
pp. 2739-2749 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard M. Zammuto

Clutch size, longevity, and body mass data for 54 North American game birds were extracted from the literature to test the hypothesis that a trade-off exists between fecundity and survival among avian species. Species with larger clutch sizes live shorter lives than species with smaller clutch sizes (r = −0.38, n = 54, P < 0.01). This relationship still holds when the effects of body mass are removed (r = −0.34, 51 df, P < 0.05), indicating that the relationship is not simply a function of body mass. This latter finding is inconsistent with previous life-history studies, perhaps because previous researchers did not attempt to remove body mass effects from their life-history investigations. Results are similar (P < 0.05) when mean values of life-history traits are examined at the generic level. However, no relationships (P > 0.05) among mean values of life-history traits occur at any taxonomic level higher than genus or when species are grouped with respect to feeding habits. This might be the result of low sample size. I conclude that the evolution of clutch size is influenced by longevity, or vice versa, among species and genera of North American game birds.


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