Parejo-Pulido Daniel, Pérez-Rodríguez Lorenzo, Abril-Colón Inmaculada, Potti Jaime, Redondo Tomás
Instituto de Investigación en Recursos Cinegéticos (IREC), CSIC-UCLM-JCCM, Ronda de Toledo 12, 13005 Ciudad Real, Spain.
Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales (MNCN), CSIC, Departamento de Ecología Evolutiva, José Gutiérrez Abascal 2, 28006 Madrid, Spain.
Behav Ecol. 2023 May 29;34(5):729-740. doi: 10.1093/beheco/arad043. eCollection 2023 Sep-Oct.
Parent-offspring conflict over food allocation can be modeled using two theoretical frameworks: passive (scramble competition) and active choice (signaling) resolution models. However, differentiating between these models empirically can be challenging. One possibility involves investigating details of decision-making by feeding parents. Different nestling traits, related to competitive prowess or signaling cryptic condition, may interact additively or non-additively as predictors of parental feeding responses. To explore this, we experimentally created even-sized, small broods of pied flycatchers and manipulated nestling cryptic quality, independently of size, by vitamin E supplementation. We explored how interactions between nestling cryptic condition, size, signals, and spatial location predicted food allocation and prey-testing by parents. Parents created the potential for spatial scramble competition between nestlings by feeding from and to a narrow range of nest locations. Heavier supplemented nestlings grew faster and were more likely to access profitable nest locations. However, the most profitable locations were not more contested, and nestling turnover did not vary in relation to spatial predictability or food supply. Postural begging was only predicted by nestling hunger and body mass, but parents did not favor heavier nestlings. This suggests that size-mediated and spatial competition in experimental broods was mild. Pied flycatcher fathers allocated food in response to nestling position and begging order, while mothers seemingly followed an active choice mechanism involving assessment of more complex traits, including postural intensity interacting with order, position, and treatment, and perhaps other stimuli when performing prey-testings. Differences in time constraints may underlie sex differences in food allocation rules.
被动(争夺竞争)和主动选择(信号传递)解决模型。然而,从实证角度区分这些模型可能具有挑战性。一种可能性是研究育雏父母的决策细节。与竞争能力或信号传递隐藏状况相关的不同雏鸟特征,可能作为亲代喂食反应的预测因素,以相加或非相加的方式相互作用。为了探究这一点,我们通过实验创建了大小均匀的小斑姬鹟窝雏,并通过补充维生素E来独立于雏鸟大小来操纵雏鸟的隐藏质量。我们探究了雏鸟隐藏状况、大小、信号和空间位置之间的相互作用如何预测亲代的食物分配和猎物测试。亲代通过在狭窄的窝位置范围内进出喂食,制造了雏鸟之间空间争夺竞争的可能性。补充维生素E后较重的雏鸟生长得更快,并且更有可能获得有利可图的窝位置。然而,最有利可图的位置并没有引发更多竞争,雏鸟更替率也与空间可预测性或食物供应无关。姿势乞食仅由雏鸟饥饿程度和体重预测,但亲代并不偏爱较重的雏鸟。这表明实验窝雏中由大小介导的和空间竞争是温和的。斑姬鹟父亲根据雏鸟位置和乞食顺序分配食物,而母亲似乎遵循一种主动选择机制,该机制涉及评估更复杂的特征,包括姿势强度与顺序、位置和处理方式的相互作用,以及在进行猎物测试时可能的其他刺激因素。时间限制的差异可能是食物分配规则中性别差异的基础。