Mueller Sarah D, Wheelwright Nathaniel T, Mennill Daniel J, Newman Amy E M, Doucet Stéphanie M, Burant Joseph B, Dobney Sarah L, Mitchell Greg W, Spina Hayley A, Woodworth Bradley K, Norris D Ryan
Department of Integrative Biology, University of Guelph, 50 Stone Rd E, Guelph, ON N1G 1Y2, Canada.
Department of Biology, Bowdoin College, 255 Maine St, Brunswick, ME 04011, United States.
Behav Ecol. 2024 Nov 23;36(1):arae093. doi: 10.1093/beheco/arae093. eCollection 2025 Jan-Feb.
The evolution of mating systems reflects a balance of the often-conflicting interests of males and females. Polygyny, a mating system in which males have multiple mates, presents a fitness benefit to males, but the consequences for females are less clear. Females with polygynous social mates may suffer reduced fitness, especially secondary females who typically receive less male support. We used 32 yr of detailed reproductive data on a population of Savannah sparrows () breeding on Kent Island, NB, Canada, to investigate the effects of females' social mating status on 6 indices of female fitness: survival, clutch size, fledging success, number of fledglings produced per nest and annually, and recruitment of offspring. Secondary females produced fewer fledglings per nest and annually than did monogamous or primary females, and their young were less likely to recruit into the breeding population. Yearling secondary females also had lower survival rates than older secondary females. Combined with higher rates of partial brood loss among secondary females, our results suggest that secondary females are unable to provide enough care to consistently fledge all nestlings in their broods, likely due to reduced male provisioning. Given that the sex ratio of breeders in the population is female-biased, we suggest that polygyny persists despite its fitness costs because some females must mate polygynously to "make the best of a bad situation." Our study demonstrates the value of detailed, long-term population monitoring data for understanding mating systems and using multiple indices of fitness to analyze the costs of polygyny.
交配系统的演化反映了雄性和雌性常常相互冲突的利益之间的平衡。一夫多妻制是一种雄性拥有多个配偶的交配系统,对雄性来说具有适应性优势,但对雌性的影响则不太明确。拥有一夫多妻制社会配偶的雌性可能会降低适应性,尤其是那些通常得到较少雄性支持的次级雌性。我们利用在加拿大新不伦瑞克省肯特岛繁殖的一群 Savannah 雀 32 年的详细繁殖数据,来研究雌性的社会交配状态对雌性适应性的 6 个指标的影响:生存、窝卵数、出飞成功率、每个巢穴和每年产生的出飞幼鸟数量,以及后代的补充。次级雌性每个巢穴和每年产生的出飞幼鸟比一夫一妻制或初级雌性少,而且它们的幼鸟进入繁殖种群的可能性较小。一岁的次级雌性的存活率也低于年龄较大的次级雌性。再加上次级雌性中部分窝雏损失率较高,我们的研究结果表明,次级雌性无法提供足够的照料,使所有窝雏都能持续出飞,这可能是由于雄性提供的资源减少所致。鉴于该种群中繁殖者的性别比例偏向雌性,我们认为尽管一夫多妻制存在适应性成本,但它仍然持续存在,因为一些雌性必须实行一夫多妻制以“在不利情况下尽力而为”。我们的研究证明了详细的长期种群监测数据对于理解交配系统以及使用多个适应性指标来分析一夫多妻制成本的价值。