Cosmetic coloration of cross-fostered eggs affects paternal investment in the hoopoe (Upupa epops).
Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/101737Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Díaz Lora, Silvia; Pérez Contreras, Tomás; Azcárate García, Manuel; Peralta Sánchez, Juan Manuel; Martínez Bueno, Manuel; Soler, Juan José; Martín-Vivaldi Martínez, ManuelEditorial
THE ROYAL SOCIETY
Materia
Sexual selection Symbiotic bacteria Bird ecology Egg coloration Female ornaments Post-mating sexual selection
Fecha
2021Referencia bibliográfica
Díaz-Lora S., Pérez-Contreras T., Azcárate-García M., Peralta-Sánchez J.M., Martínez-Bueno M., José Soler J. & Martín-Vivaldi M. (2021) Cosmetic coloration of cross-fostered eggs affects paternal investment in the hoopoe (Upupa epops). Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 288, 20203174.
Patrocinador
Spanish Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad, Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades, and European (FEDER) funds: BES-2014-069116, CGL2013-48193-C3-1-P, CGL2013-48193-C3-2-P CGL2017-83103-P.Resumen
The signalling hypothesis suggests that avian eggshell coloration is a sexually
selected female signal advertising her quality to its male partner, thereby stimulating
his provisioning rate. This hypothesis has been tested for structural
eggshell pigments, but not for cosmetic colorations, such as that produced by
the uropygial secretion on eggshells. During the breeding season, female hoopoes
(Upupa epops) host in their uropygial glands symbiotic bacteria. Females
actively smear the eggshells with their secretion, protecting embryos from
pathogenic trans-shell infections and changing eggshell coloration. Because
the colour of the secretions is related to their antimicrobial potential, cosmetic
eggshell coloration may act as a cue or even as a post-mating sexually selected
signal if it affects male provisioning rates. To experimentally test this hypothesis,
we cross-fostered already-smeared clutches between hoopoe nests, and
quantified male feeding behaviour to females before and after the experiment.
This approach allows disentanglement of the effects of female quality and of
egg coloration on male investment. In accordance with the hypothesis, males
adjusted their provisioning rate to the eggshell cosmetic coloration. This is, to
our knowledge, the first experimental demonstration that egg colour stained
with uropygial secretion could act as a post-mating sexual signal of female
quality to males.