Sex- and trait-specific contribution of individual- and population-level processes to age-related changes in multiple plumage ornaments
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
González Bernardo, Enrique; Martínez Padilla, Jesús; Camacho, Carlos; Garcia del Castillo, Marta E.; Potti, Jaime; Canal, DavidEditorial
Elsevier
Fecha
2025-05-08Referencia bibliográfica
Enrique González-Bernardo, Jesús Martínez-Padilla, Carlos Camacho, Marta E. García del Castillo, Jaime Potti, David Canal, Sex- and trait-specific contribution of individual- and population-level processes to age-related changes in multiple plumage ornaments, iScience, Volume 28, Issue 5, 2025, 112512. [DOI: 10.1016/j.isci.2025.112512]
Patrocinador
Ministerio de Ciencia (Projects: CGL2006-07481/BOS, CGL2009-10652, CGL2011-29694, CGL2014-55969-P and PID2019-104835GB-I00); Comunidad autónoma de Madrid (Project: 2022-T1_AMB-24025); Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (Projects: PID2022-141763NA-I00 and PID2022-138133NB-I00); European Union - NextGenerationEU (Margarita Salas Contract); MCIN/AEI and the European Union - NextGenerationEU/PRTR (Grant: RYC2021-033977-I); MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 (Projects: 2022-T1_AMB-24025 and PID2022-141763NA-I00)Resumen
Individuals experience changes in multiple traits across their lifespan, often peaking before senescence-driven declines. Many species display secondary sexual traits that can vary with age due to physiological and selective processes, influencing individual fitness and sexual selection. Using 13 years of longitudinal data from a pied flycatcher (Ficedula hypoleuca) population, we analyzed age-related variation in wing and forehead patches in both sexes. Wing patch size increased with age due to both within- and between-individual effects, with sex-specific patterns. Forehead patch size showed sex-dependent age effects: quadratic in females, linear in males, with only males exhibiting within-individual changes. In females, forehead patch occurrence followed a quadratic age pattern, influenced by selective (dis)appearance and reproductive timing. These results show that age-related ornament expression arises from different processes across traits and sexes, highlighting potential trade-offs between reproduction and ornamentation. This study underscores the role of both sexes’ ornaments in selection and life-history strategies.





