Avian sibling cannibalism: Hoopoe mothers regularly use their last hatched nestlings to feed older siblings
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteEditorial
Chinese Academy of Sciences
Materia
Brood reduction Clutch size Hatching asynchrony Ice-box hypothesis Infanticide Siblicide Sibling hierarchy Upupa epops
Date
2022-02-28Referencia bibliográfica
Soler et al. Avian sibling cannibalism: Hoopoe mothers regularly use their last hatched nestlings to feed older siblings. Zool. Res. 2022, 43(2): 265−274 [https://doi.org/10.24272/j.issn.2095-8137.2021.434]
Patrocinador
Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades and European (FEDER) Funds (CGL2017-83103-P)Résumé
Sibling cannibalism is relatively common in nature,
but its evolution in birds and certain other vertebrates
with extended parental care had been discarded.
Here, however, we demonstrate its regular
occurrence in two European populations of the
Eurasian hoopoe (Upupa epops) and explore
possible adaptive and non-adaptive explanations.
Results showed that sibling cannibalism was more
frequently detected in Spain (51.7%) than in Austria
(5.9%). In these two populations, the hoopoes laid
similar clutch sizes, resulting in similar fledging
production, but hatching failures were more frequent
in the northern population. Consequently, having
more nestlings condemned to die in the southern
population may explain the higher incidence of
sibling cannibalism. In accordance with this
interpretation, hatching span and failure, but not
breeding date, explained the probability of sibling
cannibalism in the Spanish hoopoes, while all three
variables predicted brood reduction intensity. Furthermore, experimental food supply reduced the
probability of sibling cannibalism, but not the
intensity of brood reduction. Finally, females
allocated fewer resources to the smallest nestlings
when they were going to starve, but not necessarily
when they were going to be used as food for their
siblings. These results suggest that hoopoes
produce extra eggs that, in the case of reduced
hatching failure and food scarcity, produce nestlings
that are used to feed older siblings. These findings
provide the first evidence that sibling cannibalism
occurs regularly in a bird species, thus expanding
our evolutionary understanding of clutch size,
hatching asynchrony, parent-offspring conflict,
infanticide, and sibling cannibalism in the animal
kingdom.