Burd Martin, Govedich Fredric R, Bateson Laura
School of Biological Sciences, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria 3800, Australia.
Proc Biol Sci. 2006 Oct 7;273(1600):2461-6. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2006.3617.
Conflict among siblings over parental investment, particularly over parental feeding, is a feature of family life in many kinds of animals. In some bird species, the size of prey items provided to juveniles has been implicated as a cause of aggressive competition among sibling chicks, because prey size determines whether dominance allows monopolization of parental offerings. Our experiment was meant to test the generality of this factor in creating intrafamilial conflict. We investigated sibling competition in relation to prey size using the carnivorous, brood-tending leech Helobdella papillornata. We equalized the total amount of food available to H. papillornata broods, but varied the size of individual prey items. Competition, measured by disparity in body size at independence, was more intense in broods provisioned with small items than in broods receiving large items, but similar between broods receiving large items and broods fed ad libitum. These patterns suggest that the intensity of conflict did not depend only on the total food amount, but was enhanced by small prey size. Our results indicate that conflict over the provision of parental resources to offspring can have a similar basis across very dissimilar organisms.
兄弟姐妹之间在父母投资方面的冲突,尤其是在父母喂食方面的冲突,是许多动物家庭生活的一个特征。在一些鸟类物种中,提供给幼鸟的猎物大小被认为是同胞雏鸟之间激烈竞争的一个原因,因为猎物大小决定了优势地位是否能让其独占父母提供的食物。我们的实验旨在测试这一因素在引发家庭内部冲突方面的普遍性。我们利用肉食性、照顾幼体的水蛭Helobdella papillornata,研究了与猎物大小相关的同胞竞争。我们使Helobdella papillornata幼体可获得的食物总量相等,但改变了单个猎物的大小。以独立时的体型差异衡量的竞争,在提供小猎物的幼体中比在提供大猎物的幼体中更激烈,但在提供大猎物的幼体和自由采食的幼体之间相似。这些模式表明,冲突的强度不仅取决于食物总量,还会因小猎物大小而加剧。我们的结果表明,在向后代提供父母资源方面的冲突,在非常不同的生物体中可能有类似的基础。