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  • Articles  (10,698)
  • Oxford University Press  (10,698)
  • Behavioral Ecology  (717)
  • Astronomy and Geophysics  (445)
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  • 101
    Publication Date: 2016-05-12
    Description: The sensory trap model of signal evolution hypothesizes that signalers adapt to exploit a cue used by the receiver in another context. Although exploitation of receiver biases can result in conflict between the sexes, deceptive signaling systems that are mutually beneficial drive the evolution of stable communication systems. However, female responses in the nonsexual and sexual contexts may become uncoupled if costs are associated with exhibiting a similar response to a trait in both contexts. Male sea lamprey ( Petromyzon marinus ) signal with a mating pheromone, 3-keto petromyzonol sulfate (3kPZS), which may be a match to a juvenile cue used by females during migration. Upstream movement of migratory lampreys is partially guided by 3kPZS, but females only move toward 3kPZS with proximal accuracy during spawning. Here, we use in-stream behavioral assays paired with gonad histology to document the transition of female preference for juvenile- and male-released 3kPZS that coincides with the functional shift of 3kPZS as a migratory cue to a mating pheromone. Females became increasingly biased toward the source of synthesized 3kPZS as their maturation progressed into the reproductive phase, at which point, a preference for juvenile odor (also containing 3kPZS naturally) ceased to exist. Uncoupling of female responses during migration and spawning makes the 3kPZS communication system a reliable means of synchronizing mate search. The present study offers a rare example of a transition in female responses to a chemical cue between nonsexual and sexual contexts, provides insights into the origins of stable communication signaling systems.
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  • 102
    Publication Date: 2016-05-12
    Description: Weather is a crucial factor affecting the onset and end of breeding in birds. However, a few studies have clearly indicated that other factors—breeding parameters and/or individual traits—can also exert an influence. Our study aimed to determine how breeding experience and parental investment are related to the start and the end of the breeding season. We used age and pair-bond duration as predictors of breeding experience. We presumed, firstly, that older birds with a longer pair-bond duration would start breeding earlier, and secondly, that greater parental investment (expressed as breeding success in the previous season) favored later breeding. We tested the above hypotheses on an urban population of blackbirds ( Turdus merula ) in 2 parks in the city of Szczecin (western Poland) over 19 years. Despite the importance of weather variables, breeding experience expressed as age and pair-bond was shown to be a significant factor, too. Older birds with more bond experience started breeding sooner. Toward the end of the breeding season older, more experienced birds prolonged this period. We also observed senescence, which was manifested as the shortening of the breeding season. Those birds with more success in the previous season prolonged their breeding period in the following season; this contradicted our hypothesis. Temperature and precipitation were negatively related to the initiation date of the first clutch but positively to the initiation date of the last one. Our survey clearly showed the importance of breeding experience with the same partner and underlined the advantages of monogamy.
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  • 103
    Publication Date: 2016-05-12
    Description: Host-plant shifts have significantly contributed to the diversification of phytophagous insects. The contact sex pheromones of such insects may be modified by the plant they feed on, thereby contributing to the formation/maintenance of sister species on different plants. Here, we addressed this issue using 2 sister species of specialist phytophagous flea beetles Altica fragaria and Altica viridicyanea , and their oligophagous F 1 hybrids. Specifically, we tested 1) if males from these Altica species recognize conspecific females based on their cuticular hydrocarbon (CHC) profile, 2) if the host plant affects the CHC profile of hybrid females, and 3) whether hybrid males distinguish between hybrid females raised on different host plants. Mate choice tests revealed that males use CHCs to identify conspecific mates. We then identified different CHC profiles in females of the 2 species and showed that the profile of CHCs in hybrids is modified by the host plant in which the beetles develop. Finally, we found that hybrid males raised on one host plant choose females with a matching profile, but this is not the case for males raised on the other plant. Our results suggest that plasticity in the expression of CHCs may have contributed to the original speciation process between the parental species. This reinforces the key role of host plants in shaping the evolution of reproductive isolation among herbivore populations.
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  • 104
    Publication Date: 2016-05-12
    Description: How animals trade-off food availability and predation threats is a strong determinant of animal activity and behavior; however, the majority of work on this topic has been on individual animals, despite the modulating effect the presence of conspecifics can have on both foraging and predation risk. Although these environmental factors (food and predation threat) vary spatially within habitats, they also vary temporally, and in marine habitats, this can be determined by not only the diel cycle but also the tidal cycle. Humbug damselfish, Dascyllus aruanus , live in small groups of unrelated individuals within and around branching coral heads, which they collectively withdraw into to escape a predation threat. In this study, we measured the proportion of individuals in the colony that were outside the coral head before and after they were scared by a fright stimulus and compared the responses at high tide (HT) and low tide (LT). We found that a greater proportion of the shoal emerged after the fright stimulus at HT and in larger groups than at LT or in smaller groups. We also quantified the pattern of emergence over time and discovered the rate of emergence was faster in larger shoals as time progressed. We show that shoals of fish change their behavioral response to a predation threat in accordance with the tide, exemplifying how temporally variable environmental factors can shape group movement decisions.
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  • 105
    Publication Date: 2016-05-12
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  • 106
    Publication Date: 2016-05-12
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  • 107
    Publication Date: 2016-05-12
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  • 108
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2016-05-12
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  • 109
    Publication Date: 2016-05-12
    Description: The growing body of literature on social behavior in fruit flies opens up exciting opportunities for addressing an unresolved issue involving the degree of correlation between behavioral traits in larvae and adults. Although the prevailing adaptive decoupling hypothesis states that metamorphosis is associated with the disruption of genetic correlations between juvenile and adult traits, 2 alternative hypotheses are that, sometimes, a positive correlation may be adaptive, and that, often, the underlying genetic architecture will prevent perfect decoupling. We used lines of the Drosophila Genetic Reference Panel to quantify the degree of sociality in larval and adult fruit flies and then examined the correlation between the life stages. To verify that our social behavior scores did not merely reflect variation in activity levels, we also quantified larval and adult activity. Although we found significant variation in social behavior and activity among larvae and adults, both traits were decoupled between larvae and adults. Social behavior and activity were not positively correlated within each life stage either. Although our results agree with the adaptive decoupling hypothesis, both ultimate and proximate considerations suggest that, generally, we should expect the degree of decoupling to vary between species and traits.
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  • 110
    Publication Date: 2016-05-12
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  • 111
    Publication Date: 2016-05-12
    Description: Birds migrating between distant locations regularly perform long continuous flights lasting several days. What compass mechanism they use is still a mystery. Here, we use a novel approach, applying an individual-based model, taking compass mechanisms based on celestial and geomagnetic information and wind into account simultaneously, to investigate what compass mechanism likely is used during long continuous flights and how wind drift or compensation affects the resulting tracks. We found that for the 6 cases of long continuous migration flights, the magnetoclinic route could best explain the route selection in all except one case compared with the alternative compass mechanisms. A flight strategy correcting for wind drift resulted most often in routes ending up closest to the predicted destinations. In only half of the cases could a time-compensated sun compass explain the migration routes observed with sufficient precision. Migration from Europe to the Siberian tundra was especially challenging to explain by one compass mechanism alone, suggesting a more complex navigation strategy. Our results speak in favor of a magnetic compass based on the angle of inclination used by birds during continuous long-distance migration flights, but also a capacity to detect and correct for drift caused by winds along the route.
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  • 112
    Publication Date: 2016-05-12
    Description: Sexual cannibalism is an extreme expression of sexual conflict, which can grant females significant fitness benefits, particularly if female fecundity depends on foraging success. However, when cannibalism is precopulatory, there is the risk that females remain unmated. Therefore, males simultaneously present the option of a meal or a mate to the females they encounter. The springbok mantis ( Miomantis caffra ) is highly aggressive, and when females cannibalize males, it is exclusively precopulatory. However, females can circumvent the risk of infertility by reproducing asexually, providing a rare opportunity to explore the interaction between sexual cannibalism and facultative parthenogenesis. We kept female mantises on high and low feeding regimes, and paired them with males, to examine how body condition and age influenced rates of cannibalism. We also investigated whether reproductive mode (sexual or asexual) influenced fecundity by measuring ootheca weight. Overall, there was an extremely high average cannibalism frequency (~62%), but no significant difference in frequencies of cannibalism between feeding regimes. Although there was a relationship between female condition and fecundity, influenced by feeding treatment, the mode of reproduction (sexual or asexual) did not result in any difference in ootheca weight. Using information-theoretic approaches, we determined that, of the variables examined, female age best accounted for cannibalistic behavior and that females became less aggressive and more likely to mate over time. This suggests that, although parthenogenesis may allow females to cannibalize males at a high frequency without incurring the cost of infertility, they may still benefit from reproducing sexually later in their lives.
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  • 113
    Publication Date: 2016-05-12
    Description: Learning is a fundamental biological adaptation that is widespread throughout the animal kingdom. According to previous research, 2 conditions are necessary for learning to be adaptive: between-generation environmental variability and within-generation environmental predictability. In this article, we show that between-generation variability is not necessary and that instrumental learning can provide a selective advantage in a complex environment, where an individual is exposed to a large number of different challenges during its lifespan. We construct an evolutionary model where individuals have a memory with limited storage capacity, and an evolving trait determines the fraction of that memory that should be allocated to innate responses to the environment versus learning these responses. The evolutionarily stable level of learning depends critically on the features of the environmental process, but generally increases with environmental complexity. We conclude by emphasizing that the specific advantages of learning should be distinguished from the general advantages of phenotypic plasticity, and we discuss possible routes to empirically test our claims.
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  • 114
    Publication Date: 2016-05-12
    Description: Expression of sexually selected signals in many species varies over time of day and season. A key model system to study this variation in signal expression is birdsong. Yet, despite good ecological understanding of why song varies across time of day and season, much of the individual variation remains unexplained. Although some of the interindividual variation in singing depends on the quality or motivation of an individual, it can also vary with other characteristics. Because singing has been shown to vary with personality traits in specific contexts, personality is thus an important candidate to explain part of the variation in seasonal and daily singing. Using a personality-typed field population of great tits ( Parus major ), we here show that singing activity peaked at dawn during the fertile period of the females and that the association between male personality and singing activity depended on the reproductive stage of his mate; faster explorers significantly increased in singing activity during main periods of fertility and maternal investment (egg laying and incubation). Moreover, males with higher singing activity tended to raise more fledglings. Increased singing by faster explorers during key periods of female reproductive investment suggests that faster explorers are more responsive to changes in female reproductive stage, contrasting the general view that faster explorers are less responsive to environmental and social changes. Most importantly, these findings highlight that multiple factors including personality need to be integrated when assessing causes of variation of highly variable sexually selected signal traits.
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  • 115
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
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  • 116
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
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  • 117
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
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  • 118
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
    Description: Eavesdropping predators and parasites that exploit the mating signals of their prey often prefer to approach certain signal variants. However, victim finding depends on many different factors. Therefore, preferences of eavesdroppers may not always directly reflect the predation or parasitism risk of the signaler. Frog-biting midges ( Corethrella spp.) and their anuran hosts offer an excellent model system to investigate this correlation. Female Corethrella are vectors of trypanosomes in frogs and use the mating calls of their anuran hosts to localize them. We tested whether the acoustic preferences of Corethrella reflects the parasitism risk of male frogs by Corethrella and trypanosomes in the field. We conducted acoustic attraction and preference tests with Corethrella in the field and used the results of the preference tests to estimate a linear model (LM) and predict the parasitism risk of sympatric frog species by Corethrella . Our preference tests in the field showed that frog-biting midges preferred higher call rates, longer calls, a frequency around 2kHz, and sounds that were broadcast near the ground. Anuran species that were predicted by our LM to produce the most attractive signal showed the highest rates of parasitism by frog-biting midges and trypanosomes. Thus, acoustic preferences of eavesdropping Corethrella can be used to predict not only the parasitism rate of their host species by Corethrella but also the risk of subsequent trypanosome transmission.
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  • 119
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
    Description: Animals in social groups can acquire information about the need for antipredator behavior by personally sampling the environment or from information provided by others. Use of such social information is expected to be adjusted according to its reliability, but experimental tests are rare and tend to focus just on alarm calls. We use detailed behavioral observations, acoustic analyses, and playback experiments to investigate how differences in sentinel dominance status affect the behavioral decisions of foraging dwarf mongooses ( Helogale parvula ). Dominant individuals acted as sentinels considerably more often than subordinate group members and used higher sentinel posts for guarding, making them potentially higher-quality sentinels in terms of experience and optimal positioning for predator detection. Surveillance calls produced during sentinel bouts contained vocal information about dominance status. Playback experiments showed that foragers used surveillance calls to detect sentinel presence and identity, and adjusted their vigilance behavior accordingly. When a dominant sentinel was on duty, compared with a subordinate groupmate, foragers increased reliance on social information, gathered less information through personal vigilance, and focused more on foraging. Our study contributes novel evidence that a major benefit of individual- and class-specific vocalizations is the potential to assess differences in caller information quality.
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  • 120
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
    Description: The mechanisms that determine the evolutionary adaptations of scavengers to carrion exploitation have been well established. In contrast, little is known about coexistence during carrion exploitation based on behavioral traits and considering obligate and facultative species together. This study revisits the hypotheses of behavioral organization within the guild of necrophagous birds in light of the adaptive processes of specialization to carrion exploitation. We used a detailed dataset of observations from high-quality video recordings in the 2 regions with the most diverse and abundant populations of European avian scavengers. Active feeding time varied between species, with the obligate scavengers spending more time eating. The way that scavengers ate the food (i.e., on the ground or carrying away) diverged among species, with species with longer and more pointed beaks and a greater prehensile ability (of talons to grip things) carrying the remains away more often. We recognized the diversity and complementarity of strategies aimed at exploiting the same resource by different species and age classes. Scavenger species were clustered according to the relationship between the time active at the feeding site and the number of feeding pecks, leading to a decrease in competition for resource exploitation, as well as an occupation of specialized trophic niches. The study of active-consumption rates showed that eagles and vultures obtained most and a half, respectively, of their daily energetic requirements from each feeding event, reinforcing the important role of this relevant food source from ecological, evolutionary, behavioral, and conservation standpoints.
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  • 121
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
    Description: In most cooperative breeders, helping is directed at close kin, allowing helpers to gain indirect fitness benefits by increasing the reproductive success of close relatives, usually their parents. Extrapair paternity (EPP) occurs at high rates in some cooperative breeders, reducing the relatedness of helpers to the young they help raise. Even so, a son that helps is related to the brood by at least 0.25 through his mother and to within-pair young by 0.5, whereas a potential helper that has EPP in his own nest is related only to the offspring he sires and unrelated to any extrapair offspring. In birds, EPP often favors older males, which in the extreme case can result in sons being more closely related to young in their parents’ nest than to young in their own nests. The fitness benefit of helping will thus be enhanced if helping lightens the workload and increases survival of helpers and their fathers, enabling them to become old, hyper-successful extrapair sires. Here, we develop and analyze a proof-of-concept model, grounded in the western bluebird ( Sialia mexicana ) system, demonstrating the conditions under which high population levels of EPP can generate inclusive fitness benefits of helping behavior that outweigh the costs. This model provides a new perspective on the relationship between EPP and helping behavior in cooperative breeders and suggests a strong need for empirical work to gather unprecedented data on paternity over the lifetime of helpers and their parents.
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  • 122
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
    Description: Animals can be flexible in their migration strategies, using several wintering sites or a variety of routes. The mechanisms promoting the development of these migratory patterns and their potential fitness consequences are poorly understood. Here, we address these questions by tracking the dispersive migration of a pelagic seabird, the Atlantic puffin Fratercula arctica , using over 100 complete migration tracks collected over 7 years, including repeated tracks of individuals for up to 6 consecutive years. Because puffins have high flight costs, dispersion may generate important variation in costs of migration. We investigate differences in activity budgets and energy expenditure between different strategies. We find that puffins visit a range of overwintering destinations, resulting in a diversity of migratory routes differing in energy expenditures; however, they show interindividual similarity in the timings and location of major movements. We consider 3 hypothetical mechanisms that could generate this pattern: 1) random dispersion; 2) sex segregation; and 3) intraspecific competition or differences in individual quality. First, we dismiss random dispersion because individuals show strong route fidelity between years. Second, we find that sex differences contribute to, but do not account fully for, the migratory variation observed. Third, we find significant differences in breeding success between overwintering destinations, which, together with differences in foraging levels between routes, suggest that birds of different quality may visit different destinations. Taken together, our results show that dispersive migration is a complex phenomenon that can be driven by multiple factors simultaneously and can shape a population’s fitness landscape.
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  • 123
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
    Description: Predation risk of individuals moving in multispecies herds may be lower due to the heightened ability of the different species to detect predators (i.e., mixed-species effect). The giraffe is the tallest land mammal, maintains high vigilance levels, and has good eyesight. As a result, heterospecific herd members could reduce their predation risk if they keyed off the giraffe’s antipredator behaviors. However, because giraffe rarely use audible alarm snorts, heterospecifics would need to eavesdrop on cues given off by the giraffe that indicate predator presence (e.g., body posture), to benefit from herding with giraffe. To test this, we compared the vigilance of zebra herding with conspecifics, with those herding with giraffe. Our results indicate that giraffe reduce zebra vigilance in zebra–giraffe herds and that in these herds, giraffe are the primary source of information regarding predation risk. In contrast, when zebra herd with conspecifics, they rely primarily on personal information gleaned from their environment, as opposed to obtaining information from conspecifics about predation risk.
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  • 124
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
    Description: There is a growing evidence that members of animal groups synchronize their vigilance behavior to minimize predation risk. Because synchronized vigilance deviates from the classical vigilance models, which assume independent scanning, it is important to understand when and why it occurs. We explored vigilance behavior of wild boar ( Sus scrofa ) in a population subject to spatial variation in human hunting risk and seasonal variation in food availability. Group members synchronized their vigilance behavior. We hypothesized that vigilance synchronization would be context dependent and the trade-off between energy gain and safety would shape the relationship between the degree of vigilance synchronization and group size. We predicted weaker synchronization in large groups under heavy predation risk, due to benefits of numerical dilution, and stronger synchronization in large groups when food is limiting, due to intense food competition. The degree of synchronization decreased with increasing group size in the area where human hunting added another risk factor to the natural predation, pointing at the safety benefits of vigilance synchrony for members of small groups and the role of human-induced risk in shaping vigilance synchrony. We found no relation between vigilance synchrony and group size in a food scarce, winter season. However, low levels of vigilance and its synchronization observed in winter indicated that energy gain was prioritized over safety. Thus, members of wild boar groups can adjust levels of vigilance and its synchronization depending on the forage-risk trade-off set by the ecological context.
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  • 125
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
    Description: When animals live near family members, this creates potential for incest and inbreeding depression, especially with unfamiliar kin. We examined incest avoidance when birds paired in kin groups and after dispersal in western bluebirds, Sialia mexicana , a cooperative breeder with a persistent, but low frequency of adult males helping at the nest. During their first winter, sons usually live in family groups comprised of parents, brothers, immigrant females, and more rarely, immigrant males and philopatric sisters. Sons usually pair with females that have joined their winter group, although some pair with females they encounter after dispersal. Incestuous pairing among relatives with relatedness ≥0.25 rarely occurred in either context, even considering extrapair fertilizations and other sources of unfamiliar kin. Sons pairing in their winter groups preferentially mated with immigrant females and actively avoided pairing with relatives. After dispersal into kin neighborhoods in spring, active incest avoidance was still required to explain low levels of incest with females within 600 m (2–3 territories) of where sons first bred, whereas absence of incest over larger distances could be explained by random mating. The probability of encountering a female relative within 600 m of where a male settled declined rapidly with dispersal distance to near zero for males dispersing 2 km from home. Although recognition is required to avoid incest when pairing in winter groups or settling near home, female-biased dispersal reduces likelihood of incest to near zero, even when males disperse relatively short distances (e.g., 2 km) from where they were born.
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  • 126
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
    Description: According to the good-genes hypothesis, females prefer males with costly displays because the costs are reliable indicators of genetic quality. In leks, mating costs result from a multiplicative interaction between the number of display performances (lek attendance) and the energetic expenditure associated with each display performance. If males differ in their allocation strategies between the 2 components of mating effort, the reliability of display performance as an indicator of genetic quality may be disrupted. Here, we investigate the association between male genetic quality and both lek attendance and display performance in the Italian treefrog, Hyla intermedia . We recorded lek attendance and display performance (nightly calling effort) during 2 breeding seasons, and we set up a breeding experiment to evaluate sire effects on 3 larval fitness-related traits (growth rate, age, and size at metamorphosis). Attendance and calling effort were positively correlated with each other and both with male mating success, providing no evidence for a performance-attendance trade-off at the population level. In the breeding experiment, we found some evidence for an effect of sire identity and attendance on growth rate and age at metamorphosis, but no evidence for an effect of sire calling effort. We conclude that female preference, by imposing high-quality standards for calling males, strengthens the role of endurance rivalry in male mating competition, indirectly favoring males of higher-than-average mating effort. Under this scenario, although male displays are unreliable indicators of mating quality, females nevertheless gain benefits because of the reduced risk of coming on low-quality males.
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  • 127
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
    Description: Fighting ability is generally assumed to predict male reproductive success; yet the mechanisms responsible for this relationship are seldom known. Competitively superior males may monopolize access to females, be preferred by females, invest more into courtship, or employ more coercive mating tactics. Differentiating these alternatives is essential to understand the interaction between male–male competition and female mate choice, and their influence on the evolution of male traits such as aggression. We tested whether male fighting ability, body size, courtship, or coercive behavior in intersexual interactions predict copulation success in the Australian Lake Eyre dragon lizard, Ctenophorus maculosus . Males with superior fighting ability had higher mating success; however, male harassment (biting and chasing) was a much stronger predictor of copulation, likely because aggressive males are able to overcome female resistance. Better fighters also copulated for longer, which may increase sperm transfer and/or fertilization success. Conversely, courtship effort (head-bobs) decreased copulation success, but only for small males. Females were no less likely to reject males with higher fighting ability, suggesting that females do not prefer these males. Furthermore, males with superior fighting ability were no more or less likely to court or harass females. Instead, both fighting ability and aggression towards females independently increased mating success, potentially generating mutually reinforcing selection on male aggression.
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  • 128
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
    Description: In collective decision making, groups collate social information to inform their decisions. Indeed, societies can gather more information than individuals—so social information can be more reliable than private information. Colonies of Temnothorax albipennis can estimate the average quality of fluctuating nest sites when the sharing of social information through recruitment is rare. However, collective decisions in T. albipennis are often reached with the use of recruitment. We use a new experimental setup to test how colonies react to fluctuating nest sites when they use recruitment to reach a decision. When recruitment is used, colonies consistently choose nest sites that fluctuate between being "good" and "poor" over constantly "mediocre" alternatives. Moreover, they do so even if the fluctuating option is only "good" for 25% of the time. The ants’ preference for fluctuating nest sites appears to be due to tandem running. Even if a nest site is only briefly "good," scouts that experience it when it is "good" are likely to perform tandem runs to it. However, a constantly "mediocre" nest site is unlikely to ever provoke tandem runs. Consequently, the fluctuating nest sites attracted more tandem runs, even when they were only "good" for a short time. This led to quorum attainment in fluctuating nest sites rather than in constant "mediocre" nest sites. The results of this experiment demonstrate how sharing of social information through recruitment can change the outcome of collective decisions.
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  • 129
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
    Description: Differences in male and female phenotypes are often the results of sexual selection. Over the years, a vast number of studies investigated how and why the 2 sexes differ in their physical appearance, reaching the conclusion that peculiar visual traits, signals, or ornaments usually evolve under the pressure of sexual selection to mediate intrasexual competition and mate choice. In social contexts, however, males and females can hold different roles and social interactions may depend on the individual gender. The female-dominated hymenopteran societies represent a fascinating scenario to investigate recognition and communication among individuals of different genders outside a common sexual selection framework because sterile female workers typically do not mate and are not attracted to males. Here, we used laboratory bioassays (lure presentation experiments) to evaluate the ability of Polistes dominula workers to discriminate between individuals of the 2 genders, investigating the relevance of the chemical and visual cues potentially involved in such process. Our results showed that P. dominula workers are able to discriminate between the sexes and visual cues rather than chemical ones are responsible for such discrimination.
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  • 130
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
    Description: Quantifying the interaction between dispersal, kinship, and genetic structure can provide insights into the factors that shape kin-structured mammal societies. Here, we first employ a combination of 8 years of capture–mark–recapture and molecular data to characterize the spatial and genetic relationships among female snow voles ( Chionomys nivalis ) in a population located in the Swiss Alps. Subsequently, we examine the individual-level consequences of kin structure in terms of fitness and mating patterns. Behavioral data, relatedness estimates, and spatial autocorrelation analyses indicate that females show strong philopatry, with spatially clustered females being characterized by high levels of genetic relatedness, leading to significant small-scale (〈30 m) spatial genetic structure (SGS). In line with selection favoring female philopatry, dispersing females had a lower fitness compared with philopatric individuals. However, we found a negative association between female reproductive success and the number of neighboring females. This suggests that female kin clustering does not constitute an adaptive strategy in this species, but rather that site tenacity is a by-product of the costs of dispersal. Although dispersal is frequently invoked as a means to avoid inbreeding, our results provide no evidence for premating inbreeding avoidance, which is in line with previous studies on mammals. Instead, in the majority of years, we observed that pairs were more-closely related than expected by chance. However, we found that both males and females with related partners had reduced reproductive success, suggesting the existence of inbreeding depression and/or postmating inbreeding avoidance mechanisms. On the whole, our results show how quantification of SGS within populations can provide insights into individual dispersal behavior and its fitness consequences, and into the ways in which social and genetic structure interacts to shape the evolution of free-living populations.
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  • 131
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
    Description: The so-called "strength of weak ties" is a central concept in social network theory, especially for understanding how information and diseases are transmitted through socially structured populations. In general, weak ties occur in networks where relatively few individuals are responsible for maintaining linkages between groups of individuals that would otherwise be poorly connected. This common structural motif can be seen in the social networks of species with fission–fusion social organization, such as giraffe ( Giraffa camelopardalis ). Giraffe social networks are characterized by social cliques in which individuals associate more with members of their own social clique than with those outside their clique. Individuals involved in weak, between-clique social interactions are hypothesized to serve as bridges by which an infection may enter a clique and, hence, may experience higher infection risk. Here, we address this and other hypotheses explaining helminth infection patterns in wild giraffe, exploring the relative roles of the social network and ranging behavior in determining infection risk. We show that infection risk is more influenced by weak ties with individuals outside one’s clique than by repeated contact with a core set of associates. Even when controlling for age and home range size, individuals who engaged in more between-clique associations, that is, those with multiple weak ties, were more likely to be infected with gastrointestinal helminth parasites. Our results suggest that diverse social interactions with giraffe from multiple cliques may increase exposure to pathogens. The importance of weak ties in pathogen transmission has only rarely been empirically demonstrated in wildlife.
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  • 132
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
    Description: Remote sensors such as Doppler radars are providing novel insights into the migrations of diverse animal taxa, but limits in scope and sensitivity can hamper the utility of these tools. For example, studies investigating whether songbirds compensate effectively for wind displacement during nocturnal migration have been challenged by the need to assess behavior on a large scale. In addition, these studies typically overlook the potential role low-altitude diurnal flights play in dealing with unfavorable winds. In such cases, a combination of approaches—new and traditional—may be necessary to understand behavior more completely. Here, we unite ground-based visual observations with a new radar analysis method to investigate how songbirds deal with crosswinds over the northeast United States. We find that nocturnally migrating birds experienced significant wind drift, even though they often flew at 90° or more to the wind direction. Significantly, more birds undertook reoriented diurnal flights after nocturnal wind drift, and wind influence, nocturnal migration intensity, and time of season together explained the majority of variation in counts of these "morning flights." This study shows that bird behavior during migration can be strongly shaped by the danger of wind drift and that some songbird species respond to drift with reoriented diurnal migratory flights. Knowledge of birds’ interactions with wind is essential for successfully modeling migratory behavior and assessing the risks associated with changing habitats and meteorological patterns. Furthermore, an understanding of the degree to which drift defines migratory behaviors may have value across animal taxa.
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  • 133
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2016-07-14
    Description: The question, "Why should prey advertise their presence to predators using warning coloration?" has been asked for over 150 years. It is now widely acknowledged that defended prey use conspicuous or distinctive colors to advertise their toxicity to would-be predators: a defensive strategy known as aposematism. One of the main approaches to understanding the ecology and evolution of aposematism and mimicry (where species share the same color pattern) has been to study how naive predators learn to associate prey’s visual signals with the noxious effects of their toxins. However, learning to associate a warning signal with a defense is only one aspect of what predators need to do to enable them to make adaptive foraging decisions when faced with aposematic prey and their mimics. The aim of our review is to promote the view that predators do not simply learn to avoid aposematic prey, but rather make adaptive decisions about both when to gather information about defended prey and when to include them in their diets. In doing so, we reveal what surprisingly little we know about what predators learn about aposematic prey and how they use that information when foraging. We highlight how a better understanding of predator cognition could advance theoretical and empirical work in the field.
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  • 134
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2016-07-20
    Print ISSN: 1366-8781
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  • 135
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2016-07-20
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  • 136
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    Unknown
    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2016-07-20
    Description: In the lives of the first RAS Fellows, Sue Bowler finds a snapshot of women's activities in astronomy in 1916.
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  • 137
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    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2016-07-20
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  • 138
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    Unknown
    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2016-07-20
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  • 139
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
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  • 140
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
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  • 141
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
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  • 142
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
    Description: Cooperative breeding occurs in several major animal phyla, predominantly in arthropods and chordates. A number of comparative analyses have focused on understanding the evolution of cooperative breeding, yielding mixed, inconclusive, and often phyla-specific findings. We argue that much of this ambiguity results from an erroneous classification of social systems into noncooperatively and cooperatively breeding species. The shortcomings of this assumption are apparent among birds where noncooperative species constitute a heterogeneous group: some species are clearly non–family living, with offspring dispersing at or shortly after nutritional independency, whereas other species form persistent family groups through offspring delaying their dispersal substantially beyond independency. Here, we propose an objective, life history–based criterion classifying noncooperative bird species into non–family living and family living species. We demonstrate that by using the family time (the time offspring remain with its parent/s beyond independence) and body size–scaled reproductive investment, we are able to differentiate 2 groups with contrasting life histories. Our classification matches seasonal environmental variation experienced by different species: family living species postpone dispersal beyond the onset of less favorable autumn conditions. We discuss the consequences of this new social system classification for evolutionary and ecological research, potentially allowing solutions to some of the most intriguing riddles in the evolutionary history of birds—and cooperative behavior itself.
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  • 143
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
    Description: Humans have brought about unprecedented changes to environments worldwide. For many species, behavioral adjustments represent the first response to altered conditions. In this review, we consider the pivotal role that behavior plays in determining the fate of species under human-induced environmental change and highlight key research priorities. In particular, we discuss the importance of behavioral plasticity and whether adaptive plastic responses are sufficient in keeping pace with changing conditions. We then examine the interplay between individual behavioral responses and population processes and consider the many ways in which changes in behavior can affect ecosystem function and stability. Lastly, we turn to the evolutionary consequences of anthropogenic change and consider the impact of altered behaviors on the evolutionary process and whether behavior can facilitate or hinder adaptation to environmental change.
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  • 144
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
    Description: Non-native species can serve as a prey resource for native predators. Yet because there is often no shared evolutionary history between the predator and prey, individuals within a predator population may vary greatly in their willingness to consume a recently introduced, yet profitable prey. Here, we measured individual variation in diet, behavior, and demographic traits of the native predatory mud crab, Panopeus herbstii , and evaluated how these traits influenced an individual’s consumption of a recently introduced, non-native crab, Petrolisthes armatus , using both simultaneous and no-choice assays. These same individual predatory mud crabs were also assayed to quantify their antipredator reaction and exploratory behavior. Results indicated significant variation in the diets of individual predators with 45% specializing on native mussels, 14% specializing on non-native Petrolisthes , and the remainder eating multiple prey species. When given a choice of alternative prey, individual Panopeus predators that consumed a larger proportion of Petrolisthes were female, smaller, and more likely to flee in response to predators. When given no choice of alternative prey, Petrolisthes was consumed more frequently by Panopeus that were female and less exploratory. We suggest that individuals that more readily consume non-native Petrolisthes may be attempting to reduce competition with conspecifics that are larger, more aggressive, exploratory, and male. Our results suggest that at least initially following invasion, adoption of a non-native prey species into the diet of a native predator may not occur universally within the population. Such nonuniform predation pressure could contribute to the non-native prey’s release from natural enemies.
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  • 145
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
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  • 146
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
    Description: In socially monogamous species, in which both sexes provide essential parental care, males as well as females are expected to be choosy. Whereas hundreds of studies have examined monogamy in biparental birds, only several such studies exist in fish. We examined mate choice in the biparental, colonial cichlid fish Neolamprologus caudopunctatus in Lake Tanganyika, Zambia. We genotyped more than 350 individuals at 11 microsatellite loci to investigate their mating system. We found no extrapair paternity, identifying this biparental fish as genetically monogamous. Breeders paired randomly according to their genetic similarity, suggesting a lack of selection against inbreeding avoidance. We further found that breeders paired assortatively by body size, a criterion of quality in fish, suggesting mutual mate choice. In a subsequent mate preference test in an aquarium setup, females showed a strong preference for male size by laying eggs near the larger of 2 males in 13 of 14 trials.
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  • 147
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
    Description: Demographic variation, such as changes in population size, affects group-living conditions and thus creates new opportunities for individuals to interact socially. To understand how this variation in the social environment affects social structure, we used social network analysis to explore affiliative behaviors of nonpup (i.e., 1 year or older), female, yellow-bellied marmots ( Marmota flaviventris ). We examined 4 social attributes (outdegree, indegree, closeness centrality, and betweenness centrality) to measure social plasticity in response to group size variation. We found that, in response to increases in group size, individuals established fewer social connections than possible, which suggests that marmots experience constraints on sociality. Similarly, closeness and betweenness centrality decreased as group size increased, suggesting that females are expected to lose influence over other members of the group as group size increases, and there are substantial constraints on marmots transmitting information to others in large groups. Our results also suggest that group-level responses, such as behavioral plasticity, can be explained by individual-level mechanisms that evaluate the costs and benefits of sociality. Interestingly, the mechanistic basis of these group-level responses may, at times, follow patterns expected by chance. We propose that further research is necessary to uncover the mechanisms underlying the individual-level behavioral response. Like group size effects studied in other domains, formally considering group size effects on social structure may shed novel light on the constraints on sociality.
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  • 148
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
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  • 149
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
    Description: Postcopulatory variation in reproductive success is fundamental for sexual selection. Because evolutionary change is impossible without a heritable basis for variation, the study of postcopulatory variation has mainly focused on genetic differences between males, that is, the effect of sperm competition or differential female responses toward male genotypes (cryptic female choice). The role of environmental components in shaping postcopulatory variation in reproductive success is well known, for example, in the form of damaging lifestyle effects on sperm, but their effect on eliciting female responses has rarely been tested, as has its relative significance compared with male genotypic effects. Here we provide such a test in bedbugs, a species where cryptic female choice has been hypothesized to be directed toward specific sperm genotypes. We measured female transcriptomic responses after experimentally controlling the male genetic and environmental component of the ejaculate. For identical female genetic background and identical male age at mating, we analyzed female gene expression in response to insemination with sperm of 3 different inbred populations (genotypes), each exposed to 1 of 2 environmental treatments (sperm storage duration in the male). Females responded mainly to environmental variation: 〉15 times more genes were differentially expressed, including stress response genes, compared with male genotypic variation. Our results suggest that postcopulatory natural selection exists and plays a significant role in the evolution and diversification of reproductive traits. Our results add complexity to testing the cryptic female choice hypothesis and show that nongenetic ejaculate effects are an important but underappreciated source of variation in biology.
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  • 150
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
    Description: Heterospecific eavesdropping on alarm calls is well documented, but less is known about the factors influencing asymmetry in the reliability of heterospecific alarm calls. Partial overlap of predators between heterospecifics has been hypothesized as 1 possible mechanism driving asymmetric eavesdropping. We tested the responses of common mynas ( Acridotheres tristis ) and red-vented bulbuls ( Pycnonotus cafer ) to reciprocal playbacks of alarm and social calls by measuring changes from baseline in the rates of fly-bys near the speaker and in rates of singing. We found an asymmetric communication network between bulbuls and mynas: bulbuls only responded to conspecific alarm calls, whereas mynas responded to both bulbul and conspecific alarm calls. This communication asymmetry may be due to a partial overlap in predators between species. Mynas were observed to spend time in both trees and on the ground and may be susceptible to both aerial and ground predators. We observed bulbuls primarily in trees and therefore may be susceptible primarily to aerial predators. If this is the case, then the alarm calls of mynas are less reliable to bulbuls compared with the reliability of alarm calls of bulbuls to mynas. However, further studies into the predators of each species are necessary before drawing a definitive conclusion. Our study demonstrates a differential responsiveness of 1 species on the alarm calls from another species for predator information and underscores the importance in considering heterospecific communication networks in the removal of species from a community.
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  • 151
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
    Description: Allonursing, the nursing of another female’s offspring, is assumed to impose a substantial energetic cost given the high cost of lactation to mothers. However, these costs have not been quantified. In cooperatively breeding mammals where helpers contribute to lactation, they might be expected to modify their behavior to mitigate these potential costs. Here, we show that overnight weight loss during lactation did not differ between allonurses and controls. However, meerkat helpers that allonursed do not gain weight over a reproductive bout as non-allonursing subordinate females did, suggesting that allonurses may incur some cost. Allonurses may mitigate the costs by increasing foraging effort during lactation. Allonurses do not, as expected, reduce investment in other cooperative behaviors during lactation. We suggest that the increase in cooperative behavior, including allonursing, may serve a social function, but further work is needed to confirm this hypothesis.
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  • 152
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
    Description: The adrenocortical stress response may divert energy away from sexual ornamentation, such that ornaments signal exposure or resistance to physiological stress. Alternatively, steroid glucocorticoids released via the stress response may support ornament development by stimulating foraging and metabolism. The relationship between glucocorticoids and ornamentation may vary with ornament type and across age and sex classes that experience different resource allocation tradeoffs. In yellow warblers ( Setophaga petechia ), we conducted the first study to simultaneously assess whether relationships between corticosterone (the primary avian glucocorticoid) and ornamentation depend on sexual pigment type, age, and sex. We quantified carotenoid- and phaeomelanin-based pigmentation using spectrometry, and assayed corticosterone in feathers (CORT f ) to derive an integrative metric of corticosterone levels during molt. Yellow warblers with lower carotenoid hue (lambda R50) had higher CORT f , suggesting that carotenoid hue may signal stress during molt across age and sex classes. Carotenoid chroma also negatively correlated with CORT f . However, this correlation was absent in older males, seemingly because these males display more saturated carotenoid pigmentation, and thus less variance in carotenoid chroma. Young males with higher CORT f also tended to have poorer quality tertial feathers, indicating poor condition at molt. Phaeomelanin-based pigmentation was largely unrelated to CORT f , suggesting that pleiotropic effects do not link phaeomelanogenesis and CORT release. Finally, CORT f was repeatable across years within individuals. Thus, carotenoid- and phaeomelanin-based pigmentation communicate nonequivalent information about physiological stress, with carotenoid pigmentation having the potential to signal stable differences in stress levels that could affect fitness.
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  • 153
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
    Description: Animal populations are currently under pressure from multiple factors that include human land use and climate change. They may compensate for such effects by reducing, either by habituation or by natural selection, the distance at which they flee from humans (i.e., flight initiation distance), and this adaptation may improve their population trends. We analyzed population trends of common breeding birds in relation to flight initiation distance and geographical location (latitude, longitude, and marginality of the breeding distribution) across European countries from Finland in the north to Spain in the south while also considering other potential predictors of trends like farmland habitat, migration, body size, and brain size. We found evidence of farmland, migratory, and smaller-sized species showing stronger population declines. In contrast, there was no significant effect of relative brain size on population trends. We did not find evidence for main effects of flight initiation distance and geographical location on trends after accounting for confounding and interactive effects; instead, flight initiation distance and location interacted to generate complex spatial patterns of population trends. Trends were more positive for fearful populations northward, westward, and (marginally) toward the center of distribution areas and more negative for fearless populations toward the south, east, and the margins of distribution ranges. These findings suggest that it is important to consider differences in population trends among countries, but also interaction effects among factors, because such interactions can enhance or compensate for negative effects of other factors on population trends.
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  • 154
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
    Description: Sociality is associated with a variety of costs and benefits, one of which can be to increase the likelihood of individuals solving novel problems. Several hypotheses explaining why groups show higher innovative problem-solving efficiencies than individuals alone have been proposed including the sharing of antipredator vigilance and the pool-of-competence effect, whereby larger groups containing a more diverse range of individuals are more likely to contain individuals with the skills necessary to solve the particular problem at hand. Interference between group members may cause groups to have lower problem solving abilities, however. Using a simulation approach, we model the shape of the relationship between group-level problem-solving probability and group size across a range of facilitation and inhibition scenarios, various population distributions of problem solving, and a task requiring 1 action or 2 actions to be solved. Simulations showed that both sharing of antipredator vigilance and the addition of competent individuals to an existing group lead to positive relationships between group-level problem solving and group size that reach 100% solving probability, whereas interference effects generate group-solving probabilities that rise to a maximum and decrease again, generating a group size for which problem solving is maximized. In contrast, both inhibition and facilitation scenarios generate identical patterns of individual efficiencies. Our results have important implications for our ability to understand the mechanisms that underpin group-size effects on problem solving in nonhumans.
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  • 155
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
    Description: Although personality has been well studied in a wide range of species, relatively few studies have assessed if behavior in standardized captive tests is predictive of behavior in the wild. We captured wild zebra finches around 2 breeding colonies and assayed their exploratory behavior with a novel environment test. The birds’ foraging behavior in the wild was also measured with the use of a passive integrated transponder tag system to monitor their use of feeders that were periodically moved around the colonies to assess exploratory behavior and sociality. During the same period, individuals’ reproductive success was monitored at the nest-boxes being used in this area. We found that our measures of sociality, wild, and captive exploration were repeatable, but contrary to our predictions, exploration in the novel environment test was not significantly correlated with exploration of feeders in the wild. We failed to find a predicted negative relationship between exploration and sociality, instead finding a significant positive correlation between exploration in the novel environment and sociality. Finally, we found little evidence that any of our measured personality traits influenced reproductive success at the colony, either individually or when the interactions between the personalities of both members of the pair were taken into account. The only exception was that highly exploratory males (assayed with wild feeder behavior) were more likely to make breeding attempts than less exploratory males. Our results suggest that researchers should use caution when using tests such as the classic novel environment test to make inferences about personality in wild populations.
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  • 156
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
    Description: Life-history theory predicts a trade-off for allocation of limited resources to reproduction and self-maintenance; however, many of the underlying physiological mechanisms remain elusive. There is growing evidence for oxidative stress to play an essential role in this trade-off because some by-products from the immune system and from normal metabolism generate reactive oxygen species that can cause oxidative damage. We manipulated reproductive effort of male and female great tits shortly before reproduction by clipping feathers of either the male or female parent of pairs of known age, given that parental effort may differ between the sexes and change over the lifetime of an individual. We quantified the effect of the treatment on morphological, physiological, behavioral, and reproductive traits. We found that feather clipping led to a decrease in parental body mass and to a reduced clutch size. Nestlings raised by clipped fathers showed reduced body mass although feeding rate was equally high between clipped and control individuals. In contrast to our predictions, we found that the feather clipping did not affect oxidative status. However, independently of the treatment, adult males had higher antioxidant capacity than females and older males showed higher oxidative damage compared with yearlings. Thus, our results suggest that the self-maintenance was prioritized over reproduction. It suggests that males are more susceptible to increased workload than females and thus more likely to reduce allocation of resources to reproduction.
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  • 157
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
    Description: In conspecific brood parasitism, some females ("parasites") lay eggs in nests of other females of the same species ("hosts"). This reproductive tactic is particularly common in waterfowl, in which studies suggest that parasites are often related to the host. Here, we test the hypothesis that hosts may discriminate and reject unrelated parasites. Based on observations and 〉4100h of digital video film, we analyze behavioral interactions at 65 nests of High Arctic common eiders during the laying sequence. We also estimate parasitism and host–parasite relatedness by albumen fingerprinting of 975 eggs from 232 nests. Among the video-filmed nests in which interactions were recorded during the egg-laying period, 11 had eggs from 2 females. At 8 of these 11 nests, there was overt female aggression and significantly lower host–parasite relatedness (mean coefficient of relationship r = –0.40) than in the nests with tolerant or no interactions ( r = 0.91). The results demonstrate active female kin discrimination in common eiders, used against nonrelatives that try to lay eggs in the nest. Other females trying to access the nest were often prevented from doing so: in 65% of 34 such attempts, the sitting female rejected the intruder. Brood "parasitism" in eiders and other waterfowl is complex, ranging from violent female conflict and parasitic exploitation of the host’s parental care to nest takeover and potential kin selection favoring acceptance of related parasites. These and other aspects of female sociality in eiders are discussed; in some respects, they may resemble certain long-lived matriarchal mammals.
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  • 158
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
    Description: In social mammals, condition and health are important determinants of the ability of males to achieve high dominance rank. Measures of individual condition are also predicted to affect male fitness via female preference for high-quality mates. We examined intermale variation in phenotypic quality (immune function and oxidative stress) in relation to male dominance status and mating success in a species with prominent female choice and a lack of male–female sexual coercion, the rhesus macaque ( Macaca mulatta ). We quantified immunity via 2 functional assays of innate immune response (bacteria killing assay and hemolytic complement assay) and measured oxidative stress via a lipid peroxidation assay in 15 adult males from 1 social group of macaques on Cayo Santiago, Puerto Rico. We then observed these males throughout the mating season to test the prediction that males in better condition achieved higher mating success. Males with more robust innate immune response and lower oxidative damage mated with a greater number of potentially fertile females. Male dominance rank, however, also correlated with our measures of quality. Higher-ranking males had more robust functional innate immune response and lower levels of oxidative damage. After accounting for rank, male quality was no longer correlated with mating success. These results demonstrate a potentially important role of male phenotypic quality in the mating system of a long-lived, group-living primate. What are the exact behavioral mechanisms via which sexual selection may operate on traits related to immunocompetence and resistance to oxidative damage in this species, however, remains an open question.
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  • 159
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
    Description: Pollinators have the capability of discriminating a wide variety of floral cues in order to identify rewarding flowers. However, little is known about how possible ecological or functional implications of horizontal and vertical positioning of flowers affect pollinator decision making. Flowers are commonly either arranged horizontally in meadows or vertically in inflorescences and blooming trees or bushes. Using bumblebees ( Bombus terrestris ), we here investigate if these 2 different foraging scenarios affect decision-making accuracy using an operant learning paradigm. Training foragers to feeders arranged either horizontally or vertically but bearing identical color or pattern cues, we found a highly significant and consistent difference in feeder choice accuracy. Bees presented with horizontally arranged feeders achieved accuracies of more than 90% by the end of the training. In contrast, bees foraging on vertically arranged feeders largely disregarded the feeder cues and accuracies remained well below 70%. Apart from feeder arrangement (horizontal, vertical) neither cue type (color, pattern), feeder display orientation (horizontal, vertical) nor vertical feeder distribution contributed significantly to choice accuracy. Training bees successively on vertical, horizontal, and vertical feeder arrays revealed that individual bees are capable of discriminating the presented feeder cues with high precision on the horizontal plane but did not use the acquired knowledge on subsequently presented vertically arranged feeders. Our results indicate that the spatial arrangement of flowers has marked effects on the foraging strategy employed by a generalist pollinator. We discuss the broader implications of foragers selectively allocating attention to focus on or disregard environmental information depending on spatial context.
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  • 160
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
    Description: As for other pollinators, hummingbirds have been classified as trapliners, that is, foragers that repeat the order in which they will revisit several locations. Although the study of hummingbird foraging behavior is extensive, there has been no direct evidence for the repeatability of hummingbird traplines. Here, we show that male territorial rufous hummingbirds repeated the order in which they visited artificial flowers in an array, which we increased one by one from 2 to 5 flowers. Despite the large number of possible routes that the birds could have flown around the flower arrays, the birds flew only a very small subset of routes and those routes were most often the shortest distance routes around the flowers. To our knowledge, this is the first quantitative evidence that hummingbirds do develop traplines when foraging.
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  • 161
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
    Description: Animals may perceive humans as a form of predatory threat, a disturbance, triggering behavioral changes together with the activation of physiological stress responses. These adaptive responses may allow individuals to cope with stressful stimuli, but a repeated or long-term exposure to disturbances may have detrimental individual- and population-level effects. We studied the effects of human activities, particularly hunting, on the behavior and physiological status of a near-threatened nongame steppe bird, the little bustard. Using a semiexperimental approach, we compared before, during, and after weekends: 1) the type and intensity of human activities and 2) the behavior and 3) physiological stress (fecal corticosterone metabolites) of wintering birds. Higher rates of human activity, in particular those related to hunting, occurred during weekends and caused indirect disturbance effects on birds. Little bustards spent more time vigilant and flying during weekends, and more time foraging in the mornings after weekend, possibly to compensate for increased energy expenditure during weekends. We also found increased physiological stress levels during weekends, as shown by higher fecal glucocorticoid metabolite concentrations. Increased corticosterone metabolite levels were associated with the highest levels of hunting-related disturbances. Little bustard showed marked behavioral and physiological (stress hormones) responses to human activities that peaked during weekends, in particular hunting. The long-term effect of this particular activity carried out during weekends from autumn throughout winter might adversely impact wintering populations of this nongame endangered species, potentially counteracting conservation efforts conducted on local as well as foreign breeding populations.
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  • 162
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
    Description: Urbanization involves dramatic environmental alterations, which can limit survival and reproduction of organisms and contribute to loss of biodiversity. One such alteration is anthropogenic noise, which biases natural ambient noise spectra toward low frequencies where it may interfere with acoustic communication among birds. Because vocalizing at higher frequencies could prevent masking by noise, it has been hypothesized that species with higher song frequencies should be less affected by urbanization. Indeed, evidence is accumulating that urban birds often vocalize at higher frequency than nonurban birds. However, the extent to which singing frequency affects their success in cities is less clear. We tested this hypothesis with a comprehensive phylogenetic Bayesian analysis comparing song frequency of songbirds from 5 continents with 4 measures of success in urbanized environments. Tolerance to urbanization was not associated with dominant or minimum song frequencies, regardless of the metric used to quantify urban success and the intensity of the urban alterations. Although song frequency was related to habitat preferences and body size of the species, none of these factors explained the lack of association with urban success. Singing high may be beneficial for signal perception under noisy conditions, but these high frequencies are apparently no guarantee for the success of bird species in urbanized environments.
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  • 163
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
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  • 164
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
    Description: Activity patterns have profound implications on primates’ morphology, physiology, and behavior and have likely driven their diversification. The last common ancestor of extant primates has been traditionally considered nocturnal although this notion has been recently debated due to emerging contradictory evidence. Previous studies underestimated the role of cathemerality (i.e., the ability to remain active throughout a 24-h cycle) by simplifying primate activity to the diurnal–nocturnal dichotomy. We estimated the evolutionary trajectories of activity patterns in primates and investigated how these may have influenced their diversification rates. We used a comprehensive data set to test multiple evolutionary hypotheses, following a robust Bayesian framework by using 5000 calibrated phylogenetic trees to account for phylogenetic uncertainty. Our results support a nocturnal ancestor that has shifted to diurnality in the Simiformes, has retained nocturnality in Lorisiformes and most Lemuriformes, and shifted to cathemerality in the ancestor of Lemuridae. The diversification of activity patterns in primates seems to have mainly arose by speciation rather than shifts between activity patterns, suggesting a low flexibility of diurnal and nocturnal patterns and the key importance of cathemeral activity as transitional state to shift between more specialized activity patterns. A cathemeral activity seems to appear well before diurnality in Malagasy lemurs, suggesting an ancient origin of this trait on the island and rejecting the hypothesis of a recent transition. The present research contributes to further disentangle the adaptive role of activity patterns in primate evolution.
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  • 165
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
    Description: Many animals communicate through acoustic signaling, and "acoustic space" may be viewed as a limited resource that organisms compete for. If acoustic signals overlap, the information in them is masked, so there should be selection toward strategies that reduce signal overlap. The extent to which animals are able to partition acoustic space in acoustically diverse habitats such as tropical forests is poorly known. Here, we demonstrate that a single cicada species plays a major role in the frequency and timing of acoustic communication in a neotropical wet forest bird community. Using an automated acoustic monitor, we found that cicadas vary the timing of their signals throughout the day and that the frequency range and timing of bird vocalizations closely track these signals. Birds significantly avoid temporal overlap with cicadas by reducing and often shutting down vocalizations at the onset of cicada signals that utilize the same frequency range. When birds do vocalize at the same time as cicadas, the vocalizations primarily occur at nonoverlapping frequencies with cicada signals. Our results greatly improve our understanding of the community dynamics of acoustic signaling and reveal how patterns in biotic noise shape the frequency and timing of bird vocalizations in tropical forests.
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  • 166
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
    Description: Surface ice in rivers and lakes buffers the thermal environment and provides overhead cover, protecting aquatic animals from terrestrial predators. We tested if surface ice influenced the behavior (swimming activity, aggressive encounters, and number of food items eaten) and stress level (coloration of eyes and body) of stream-living brown trout Salmo trutta at temperatures of 3–4 °C in indoor experimental flumes. We hypothesized that an individual’s resting metabolic rate (RMR, as measured by resting ventilation rate) would affect winter behavior. Therefore, groups of 4 trout, consisting of individuals with high, low, or mixed (2 individuals each) RMR, were exposed to experimental conditions with or without ice cover. Ice cover reduced stress responses, as evaluated by body coloration. Also, trout in low RMR groups had a paler body color than those in both mixed and high RMR groups. Trout increased their swimming activity under ice cover, with the highest activity found in high RMR groups. Ice cover increased the number of aggressive encounters but did not influence the number of drifting food items taken by each group. In mixed RMR groups, however, single individuals were better able to monopolize food than in the other groups. As the presence of surface ice increases the activity level and reduces stress in stream-living trout, ice cover should influence their energy budgets and production. The results should be viewed in light of ongoing global warming that reduces the duration of ice cover, especially at high latitudes and altitudes.
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  • 167
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
    Description: In recent years, considerable research interest in behavioral ecology has focused on characterizing and understanding individual differences in behavior that are consistent over time and across contexts, termed animal "personalities," and correlations between various behaviors across contexts, termed behavioral syndromes. Although there is some evidence that differences in personality among individuals within populations can be genetically based and adaptive, when and how individual personality differences emerge in a population is not well understood, but of considerable general interest. Here, using juveniles of the convict cichlid ( Amatitlania siquia ) as a model system, we investigated in the laboratory whether individuals consistently differ in their personalities and whether behavioral syndromes are apparent at an early developmental stage and, if so, whether distinct personality traits are heritable. Under standardized laboratory conditions and using sibling analysis, we quantified interindividual differences in their boldness behavior under potential predation threat and their exploratory activity in a novel environment, 2 ecologically important behaviors, as our focal personality traits and estimated their respective repeatability and heritability. We report for the first time consistent (repeatable) and heritable individual differences in boldness and exploratory behaviors, and a boldness–exploration behavioral syndrome, in young convict cichlids. Bolder fish were more exploratory than relatively timid ones. These results provide novel evidence for the emergence in early life history of consistent individual differences in personality traits and behavioral syndromes in this species and suggest that genetic variation for boldness and exploratory behaviors, and thus potential for selection on these traits, exists in our study population.
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  • 168
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
    Description: Many animals search for potential mates or prey using a perch-and-sally strategy. The success of such a strategy will depend on factors that affect the observer’s ability to detect a passing resource item. Intrinsic factors (e.g., eye structure and physiology) have received much recent attention, but less is known about effects on object detection in nature and extrinsic factors such as size, coloration, and speed of a passing object and the background against which the object is viewed. Here, we examine how background affects the detection of butterfly models by perched males of the butterfly Asterocampa leilia in the field. We test the hypothesis that male choice of perch site in nature will influence the contrast between the object and background against which it is viewed and that this will influence success in detecting the object. We also test the effect of contrast by manipulating the brightness of the object and presenting butterfly models of different reflectance (ranging from black to white). We found an effect of model luminance, with dark models being most likely to elicit a response regardless of background. Further, there was an effect of background type with models viewed against blue sky eliciting the highest response. Perceived luminance contrast correlates to behavior; highly contrasting objects are more frequently detected. This study expands our understanding of visual system performance and has implications for our understanding of the behavior and evolutionary ecology of perching species.
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  • 169
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
    Description: Theory suggests that consistent individual differences in activity are linked to life history where high activity is associated with rapid growth, high dispersal tendency, and low survival (the pace-of-life syndrome hypothesis). We addressed this influential hypothesis by combining behavioral studies with fine-scale positional scoring in nature, estimating how individual movement strategies in brown trout ( Salmo trutta ) associate with fitness correlates (growth and survival) in the wild. Initial dispersal in the wild was positively related to the laboratory activity. Moreover, the growth of individuals with high laboratory activity decreased with increasing home range size, whereas the growth of individuals with lower laboratory activity increased slightly with increasing home range size. Survival in the wild was not associated with laboratory activity. Our results do not support the original pace-of-life syndrome hypothesis. As an alternative explanation, we suggest that the growth of individuals adopting a high-activity strategy is more sensitive to variation in resource abundance (indicated by home range size) than the fitness individuals adopting a more passive strategy.
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  • 170
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
    Description: The study of adaptive individual behavior ("animal personality") focuses on whether individuals differ consistently in (suites of correlated) behavior(s) and whether individual-level behavior is under selection. Evidence for selection acting on personality is biased toward species where behavioral and life-history information can readily be collected in the wild, such as ungulates and passerine birds. Here, we report estimates of repeatability and syndrome structure for behaviors that an insect (field cricket; Gryllus campestris ) expresses in the wild. We used mark-recapture models to estimate personality-related survival and encounter probability and focused on a life-history phase where all individuals could readily be sampled (the nymphal stage). As proxies for risky behaviors, we assayed maximum distance from burrow, flight initiation distance, and emergence time after disturbance; all behaviors were repeatable, but there was no evidence for strong syndrome structure. Flight initiation distance alone predicted both daily survival and encounter probability: bolder individuals were more easily observed but had a shorter life span. Individuals were also somewhat repeatable in the habitat temperature under which they were assayed. Such environment repeatability can lead to upward biases in estimates of repeatability in behavior; this was not the case. Behavioral assays were, however, conducted around the subject’s personal burrow, which could induce pseudorepeatability if burrow characteristics affected behavior. Follow-up translocation experiments allowed us to distinguish individual and burrow identity effects and provided conclusive evidence for individual repeatability of flight initiation distance. Our findings, therefore, forcefully demonstrate that personality variation exists in wild insects and that it is associated with components of fitness.
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  • 171
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
    Description: For many animal taxa, group-living is a strategy where the cohesion provided by groups confers fitness benefits to individuals. Bats are highly gregarious with many species living in groups with complex social structures. During the summer, many temperate species are sexually segregated among roosts where females have been found to exhibit dynamic social structures and males remain understudied. We studied the group dynamics of little brown and northern Myotis bats ( Myotis lucifugus and Myotis septentrionalis ) during autumn swarming, a period for which social interactions are largely unknown. Using capture–mark–recapture surveys, we characterized the occurrence and frequency of age and sex groups occurring at swarms. Within a night, young-of-the-year associated more often with other bats than did adult males and females. Further, they associated more often with other young-of-the-year than adults. We found no evidence to support the maternal guidance hypothesis predicting that there would be associations between mother–offspring pairs. Adult male and female bats associated less frequently with each other and were captured alone most often. When males were captured in groups, these groups were more likely to be composed of multiple males and in M. lucifugus , males had preferred male associates they grouped with over multiple nights. Groups formed during the autumn swarming season may represent cohort groups of young bats learning of the location of sites and groups of males that are potentially cooperating to secure more mating opportunities.
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  • 172
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
    Description: Offspring transmit signals to parents to communicate their resource demands. Parents interpret these signals and should adjust provisioning efforts to meet offspring demands but only to the point at which the benefits of enhanced offspring quality stops exceeding the increased costs to future reproduction. We investigated both proximate behavioral mechanisms in these interactions and ultimate-level decisions for total parental investment in streaked shearwaters Calonectris leucomelas by recording begging calls, monitoring parental attendance, and altering states of chicks by supplementing food. In our study, chicks seemed to honestly communicate satiety and body condition via begging. The parents, however, did not downwardly adjust feeding rates, meal sizes delivered to chicks, and total investment in nests in which chicks were regularly supplementary-fed partial meals. But on nights when both parents visited the nest, the second-arriving parents recognized that chicks had already received a full meal because they reduced the food they gave to chicks and also lengthened their subsequent foraging trip. Our findings therefore suggest that although chick begging appeared to reflect need, parents only responded to variation in begging that indicated that chicks had already received a full meal. In a simulation, we show that this strategy prevents parents from exceeding the optimal amount of parental investment. Their insensitivity to slightly reduced begging after partial meals caused them to exceed optimal investment in supplementary-fed nests, suggesting that parental investment is largely regulated by responses to feeding rate of the other parent rather than being fine-tuned to cues about body condition of chicks.
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  • 173
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
    Description: Animals respond to approaching predators by taking flight at a distance that optimizes the costs and benefits of such flight. Previous studies have shown that urban populations of birds have shorter flight initiation distances than rural populations of the same species, that this difference is partly explained by differences in the community of predators, and that a longer history of urbanization implies a greater reduction in flight initiation distance in urban populations. The use of birdfeeders may be an additional factor reducing flight initiation distance not only in cities but also elsewhere by among other effects increasing body condition, increasing availability and reliability of food, and hence reducing the relative cost of flight. Here, we tested the prediction that urban habitats and presence of feeders independently accounted for reductions in flight initiation distance using extensive samples from different cities in Poland. We found independent significant effects of urban habitat and presence of feeders on flight initiation distance. These findings suggest that different factors have contributed to the "tameness" of urban birds.
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  • 174
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
    Description: The expected quality of paternal behavior can influence female mating decisions and determine male mating success. We evaluated the importance of oviposition site quality, male body size, parental status (presence vs. absence of eggs under males’ protection), and time invested in care (less vs. more than 1 month) for male mating success in the harvestman Iporangaia pustulosa . The chances of acquiring a clutch are relatively small for noncaring males but increase nearly 4 times once males start caring for eggs. After 1 month of caring, the chances of acquiring an additional clutch show a marked decline, probably because the cumulative energetic costs imposed by paternal care decreases males’ attractiveness or their ability to replenish gametes throughout the caring period. Therefore, male mating success seems to be affected by a combination of presence of eggs and body condition while caring. Because the presence of eggs increases male attractiveness, we also conducted a field experiment removing caring males from their broods and expected that noncaring males would adopt unattended broods as a deceptive strategy to acquire matings. However, noncaring males cannibalized eggs and no brood adoption was recorded. Because well-fed males stay stationary on the vegetation waiting for mating opportunities, unattended broods may have been found more often by vagrant and poorly fed males. We argue that detailed comprehension of the costs and the benefits of paternal activities, as well as the direct benefits of female preference, is fundamental to better understand the interaction between male care and female mate choice.
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  • 175
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
    Description: Sex allocation theory predicts that parents should bias offspring sex according to the costs and benefits associated with producing either sex in a given context. Accurately interpreting sex-ratio biases, therefore, requires a precise identification of these selective pressures. However, such information is generally lacking. This may partly explain the inconsistency in reported sex allocation patterns, especially in vertebrates. We present data from a long-term feeding experiment in black-legged kittiwakes ( Rissa tridactyla ) that allowed us to increase investment capacity for some breeding pairs. Previous findings showed that these pairs then overproduced sons compared with control parents. Here, our aim was to test the underlying assumptions of the 2 appropriate sex allocation models for our context: the "cost of reproduction hypothesis" and the "Trivers–Willard hypothesis." The former assumes a sex difference in rearing costs, whereas the latter assumes a difference in fitness returns. 1) Independent of feeding treatment, rearing sons was energetically more demanding for parents (as revealed by higher energy expenditure and higher baseline corticosterone levels) than rearing daughters, thereby corroborating the underlying assumption of the "cost of reproduction hypothesis." 2) Evidence supporting the assumptions of the "Trivers–Willard hypothesis" was less convincing. Overall, our results suggest that drivers of parental sex allocation decisions are probably more related to offspring sex-specific energetic costs than to their future reproductive success in our study species. Assessing the adaptive value of sex-ratio biases requires precise investigation of the assumptions underlying theoretical models, particularly as long as the mechanisms involved in sex-ratio manipulation remain largely unknown.
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  • 176
    Publication Date: 2015-05-16
    Description: In social groups, hierarchies are the fundamental organizational unit and integral to the structure of social groups. For many social fishes, rank is determined by body size and conflict over rank is resolved via aggressive threats from dominants and growth restraint by subordinates. However, this balance may be offset by an alteration of abiotic factors, such as elevated temperature expected from climate change, which could thereby disrupt the usual mechanisms of conflict resolution. Here, we determined the effect of elevated temperature on hierarchy structure, stability, and conflict resolution in the Eastern mosquitofish, Gambusia holbrooki . Body size was significantly related to dominance rank, and aggression was more commonly directed toward subordinates and was heightened between individuals of adjacent rank, demonstrating that conflict over rank occurs in size-based hierarchies. Temperature did not affect overall levels or directionality/adjacency of aggression but substantially altered subordinate growth patterns. In only the high-temperature groups, growth rates of subordinates decreased as the size ratio between themselves and their immediate dominant approached 1.0, whereas growth rates of dominants were unaffected. This unique finding suggests that only under high temperatures, subordinates may adopt growth regulation to resolve conflict, when the costs of conflict with dominants are greater. This provides the first causal link between abiotic stressors and changes to hierarchical structure and functioning, providing a springboard for further research into implications of temperature-dependent subordinate growth alteration at higher levels of ecological organization.
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  • 177
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    Unknown
    Oxford University Press
    Publication Date: 2015-03-27
    Description: Mate choice is an important evolutionary process influencing a vast array of traits and ecological processes. Although the study of mate choice has proved to be hugely popular, the number of ways in which mate choice can be described is complex and a bewildering array of terminology has developed. The author begins by summarizing some examples of the range of terms used to describe choice that expose this complexity. The author then shows how the information conveyed by different mate choice descriptors can be better understood by comparison to null expectations, that is, the expected variation in a trait when mate choice is not expressed. This comparison is important because many traits that might be affected by mate choice, such as mating rate, mate search effort, and responsiveness, also vary in non-choosy individuals. This is in contrast to other traits, such as the slope of a preference function and mate assessment effort, for which null expectations are predictable. By understanding the null expectation for a trait, its utility as a descriptor of mate choice can be gauged. From this basis, the author suggests an alternative approach to the description of mate choice based upon a principle of describing variation in both "what" is preferred and "by how much" it is preferred. Crucially, the author describes how this approach might apply to a wide range of preference function shapes, thus aiding comparisons across taxa. Finally, the author considers how an improved appreciation of the way mate choice is described can inform future research.
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  • 178
    Publication Date: 2015-03-27
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  • 179
    Publication Date: 2015-03-27
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  • 180
    Publication Date: 2015-03-27
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  • 181
    Publication Date: 2015-03-27
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  • 182
    Publication Date: 2015-03-27
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  • 183
    Publication Date: 2015-03-27
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  • 184
    Publication Date: 2015-03-27
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  • 185
    Publication Date: 2015-03-27
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  • 186
    Publication Date: 2015-03-27
    Description: Understanding how organisms respond to any environment requires a full characterization of how the environment varies over time and space. A rapidly growing literature on the influence of anthropogenic noise on wildlife, and in particular animal communication, has yet to fully describe this variation. Point measurements of amplitude, often separated in time and space from animal observations, and qualitative descriptions of noise inadequately capture variation, a bias that may limit deeper understanding of noise effects on wildlife. We suggest that a greater focus on temporal and spatial heterogeneity in noise amplitude, as well as additional properties of noise, including onset, consistency, regularity, and frequency range, is critical for continued advancement in this emerging field. Recordings of noise using calibrated systems allow researchers to measure a suite of noise properties simultaneously with animal observations. Not only will such an approach improve quantification of single metrics of noise, the noise data collected may then be analyzed in a multivariate framework, which will help us understand the full range of behavioral and physiological adjustments animals may make and their broader implications for wildlife health and conservation.
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  • 187
    Publication Date: 2015-03-27
    Description: Artificial light at night is an increasing threat for ecological processes. Previous work has highlighted the effects of nighttime light on individuals and on higher levels of biological organization, such as community ecology and ecosystem functioning. Here, we focus on the effects of artificial light at night on social interactions and group dynamics. We discuss 4 main ways of how light pollution is expected to alter social interactions and group dynamics. First, light at night can alter the activity patterns of individuals and this is predicted to affect the social network structure of populations, which in turn affects the transfer of information and diseases. Second, changes in activity patterns and disrupted biological rhythms are expected to reduce behavioral synchrony in social processes such as reproduction, migration, and dispersal. Third, increased light at night is expected to affect the communication between individuals; primarily, it will increase the opportunities for visual social information transfer. Last, artificial nighttime light is expected to lower social competence, with subsequent negative effects on aggressive interactions and group coordination. Throughout the article, we propose testable hypotheses and identify suitable study species, and we hope that this article inspires future research on the effects of bright nights on social interactions and group dynamics.
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  • 188
    Publication Date: 2015-03-27
    Description: Quantifying the shape and strength of mating preferences is a vital component of the study of sexual selection and reproductive isolation, but the influence of experimental design on these estimates is unclear. Mating preferences may be tested using either no-choice or choice designs, and these tests may result in different estimates of preference strength. However, previous studies testing for this difference have given mixed results. To quantify the difference in the strength of mating preferences obtained using the 2 designs, we performed a meta-analysis of 38 studies on 40 species in which both experimental designs were used to test for preferences in a single species/trait/sex combination. We found that mating preferences were significantly stronger when tested using a choice design compared with a no-choice design. We suggest that this difference is due to the increased cost of rejecting partners in no-choice tests; if individuals perceive they are unlikely to remate in a no-choice situation they will be more likely to mate randomly. Importantly the use of choice tests in species in which mates are primarily encountered sequentially in the wild may lead to mating preferences being significantly overestimated. Furthermore, this pattern was seen for female mate choice but not for male mate choice, and for intraspecific choice but not for interspecies or interpopulation mate discrimination. Our study thus highlights the fact that the strength of mating preferences, and thus sexual selection, can vary significantly between experimental designs and across different social and ecological contexts.
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  • 189
    Publication Date: 2015-03-27
    Description: Traditional views of sexual selection view males as the indiscriminate sex, competing for access to choosy females. It is increasingly recognized that mating can also be costly for males and they are therefore likely to exhibit choice in order to maximize their reproductive success. Stalk-eyed flies are model species in sexual selection studies. Males are sperm limited and constrained in the number of matings they are able to partake in. In addition, variation in female fecundity has been shown to correlate positively with female eyespan, so eyespan size could provide males with a reliable signal of female reproductive value. We examined male mate preference in the wild in the stalk-eyed fly, Teleopsis dalmanni . In addition, we set up experiments in the laboratory allowing males a choice between females that varied in 1) eyespan (a proxy for fecundity) and/or 2) fecundity (manipulated through diet). We found that males exhibited preference for large eyespan females, both in the wild and laboratory studies. As well as using female eyespan as a mating cue, males were also able to assess female fecundity directly. Changes in fecundity among large eyespan females caused corresponding changes in male mate preference, whereas changes in the fecundity of small eyespan females had limited effect on their attractiveness. These results show that male mate preferences are a prevalent feature of a canonical example of female mate choice sexual selection and that males use multiple cues when they assess females as potential mates.
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  • 190
    Publication Date: 2015-03-27
    Description: To study biologically relevant variation in visual signals, these need to be assessed in relation to the sensory abilities of receivers. For the study of colors, reflectance spectrometry has been the method of choice, but analyses of reflectance spectra present challenges that hamper our understanding of color variation. Among these are computing meaningful color variables and interpreting their biological relevance. Here, we suggest how to overcome the limitations of commonly used approaches. We describe how to use psychophysical visual models to assess chromatic variation in the visual space of animals. This approach consists of 1) obtaining cone quantum catches from reflectance spectra, 2) transforming these into visual space coordinates where Euclidean distances reflect perceptual distances, 3) summarizing variation in visual space using principal component analysis (PCA) maintaining original perceptual units, and 4) interpreting the axes of chromatic variation (PC) based on their loadings and relative and absolute levels of chromatic variation. We illustrate this approach by comparing it to traditional color indices (hue and saturation) and PCA computed directly on reflectance spectra, using 2 examples: 1) determining the biological relevance of correlations between bill coloration and male quality in mallards and 2) assessing the success of experimental color manipulations in blue tits. In both cases, re-analyzing the data suggests different interpretations. This approach provides a simple way of objectively summarizing chromatic variation and interpreting the magnitude of biologically relevant effects. We provide R scripts to carry out computations and recommendations on how to report results to make data comparable between studies.
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  • 191
    Publication Date: 2015-03-27
    Description: The ability of an organism to detect threats is fundamental to mounting a successful defense and this is particularly important when resisting parasites. Early detection of parasites allows for initiation of defense mechanisms, which are vital in mitigating the cost of infection and are likely to be especially important in social species, particularly those whose life history makes parasite pressure more significant. However, understanding the relative strength of behavioral responses in different species and situations is still limited. Here, we test the response of individual ants to fungal parasites in 3 different contexts, for 4 ant species with differing life histories. We found that ants from all 4 species were able to detect fungi on their food, environment, and nest mates and initiate avoidance or upregulate grooming behaviors accordingly to minimize the threat to themselves and the colony. Individuals avoided fungal-contaminated surfaces and increased grooming levels in response to fungal-contaminated nest mates. Ants from all species responded qualitatively in a similar way although the species differed quantitatively in some respects that may relate to life-history differences. The results show that ants of multiple species are capable of recognizing fungal threats in various contexts. The recognition of parasite threats may play an important role in enabling ant colonies to deal with the ever-present threat from disease.
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  • 192
    Publication Date: 2015-03-27
    Description: Different populations of a host species subject to variable patterns of selection due to cuckoo parasitism provide an optimal situation for studying natural selection and coevolution in action. We compared egg appearance and egg-rejection behavior of 2 common cuckoo ( Cuculus canorus ) hosts, the ashy-throated parrotbill ( Paradoxornis alphonsianus ) and the vinous-throated parrotbill ( Paradoxornis webbianus ) between mainland China and Taiwan population that have been segregated for 2–3 million years. Avian visual modeling showed that the mainland host population under strong selection from brood parasitism has evolved polymorphic eggs, while the island host population released from brood parasitism has maintained the original monomorphic egg phenotype. Furthermore, experiments indicated that under such long historical segregation, egg rejection in the island population decayed dramatically in the absence of cuckoo parasitism. This study provides strong evidence that egg-rejection ability can be dramatically deficient in host populations without brood parasitism compared to parasitized ones. The results further enhance our understanding of changes in egg-rejection behavior in birds without the selection pressure of brood parasitism for an extended period of time.
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  • 193
    Publication Date: 2015-03-27
    Description: In scramble competition polygyny, male and female mobility may be under strong selection as a result of fitness effects of searching for reproductive resources such as mates, oviposition sites, or resources for egg production. We analyzed the relationship between mating frequency, mobility, and body size in males and females of the chrysomelid beetle Leptinotarsa undecimlineata . We obtained a detailed data set of movement and mating frequency of an entire population (1037 adults) over a full reproductive season using individual tagging and direct behavioral observations. Unlike previous studies, we found a negative relationship between mobility and mating success for both sexes. Size was positively correlated to mating frequency in females, but negatively in males. High male mobility may be the result, and not a cause, of low mating success in scramble mating polygynies where rejected or displaced males switch plants more often searching for mating opportunities. More mobile females may be looking for competition-free oviposition substrate and thus experiencing fewer sexual encounters.
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  • 194
    Publication Date: 2015-03-27
    Description: Few biological examples of cooperation seem to precisely fit the assumptions of an iterated prisoner’s dilemma. In an attempt to increase biological validity, one model altered the assumption that cooperating is an all-or-nothing decision to a situation where benefits are a function of interaction duration, which in turn is a function of the levels of cooperation. A potential application involves pairs of cleaner fish coinspecting a client fish. In this mutualism, clients visit cleaners to have ectoparasites removed but a conflict of interest exists, as cleaners prefer to eat client mucus, which constitutes cheating. As large clients often flee in response to a cleaner cheating, pair inspections lead to a dilemma: the cheater obtains the benefit while both cleaners share the cost of the client leaving. The model predicts that pairs of cleaners behave more cooperatively toward reef fish clients than when inspecting alone, to entice clients to profit from the increased parasite removal rate and keep interaction duration almost constant. Here, we present field experiments that first replicate results that pairs behave indeed more cooperatively than when inspecting alone and second show that levels of cooperation quantitatively predict the duration of cleaning interactions. We also found that several additional variables may affect the duration of cleaning interactions, such as a client’s willingness to interact with a cleaner, identity of interaction terminator, and the presence of bystanders. In conclusion, introducing benefits as a function of interaction duration into the prisoner’s dilemma framework provides a biologically relevant framework to study cooperation.
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  • 195
    Publication Date: 2015-03-27
    Description: Anthropogenic noise is a major pollutant for organisms that live in urban areas. City birds modify their songs in ways that can increase their communication potential in spite of noise. However, these changes cannot prevent song masking by the extremely loud noises to which some urban bird populations are exposed. Here, we show that birds near a major airport advance their dawn singing time, thus reducing overlap with periods of intense aircraft noise. This modification was stronger in species whose normal singing time was relatively late, those which overlapped the most with aircraft noise. Although suggestive of a causal relationship, this pattern does not allow us to tell apart the effect of aircraft noise from that of other variables that may correlate with dawn singing time. In order to control for such potentially confounding variables, we replicated the study in several airports at different latitudes in Spain and Germany. The results show that indeed the overlap of song chorus with aircraft noise was the key factor that influenced time advancement. Aircraft traffic time was the main predictor of song advancement: across Europe, those bird populations whose singing time overlapped the most with aircraft traffic were those that advanced their song timing to a higher extent. Our results exemplify how behavioral plasticity may allow the survival of avian populations in areas of high noise pollution. However, such an adaptation likely involves departing from optimal singing times, leading to higher energetic costs and amplifying between-species differences in competitive ability and resilience.
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  • 196
    Publication Date: 2015-03-27
    Description: Sexual selection theory suggests that males benefit more than females from multiple mates and that sexual selection is weak in monogamous mating systems. However, little research on sexual selection has been conducted simultaneously in men and women, and we lack a detailed understanding of the socioecological factors that can influence it. Here, we examined the effects of wealth and sex on 2 distinct episodes of human sexual selection (marry once and remarry) in historical Norwegian populations with imposed monogamy, where remarriage was only possible after widowhood. We quantified sexual selection using the Bateman gradient. We also examined the underlying proximate factors that might influence the odds of remarriage and reproduction after widowhood. We found that the intensity of sexual selection corresponds well with Bateman gradients measured in other monogamous populations and was stronger for those who married once than for those who remarried. The selection gradients on "marry once" were affected by neither sex nor wealth. However, when we measured the gradients on "remarry," sexual selection was stronger on wealthy men and women compared with those who were poor. Remarriage age was the most important underlying factor explaining how widows increased reproductive success. For widowers, it was to remarry a younger woman than themselves. In conclusion, we show that sexual selection can operate on both sexes in a monogamous population and suggest that under certain circumstances (when very wealthy), women can benefit as much as men can by remarriage.
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  • 197
    Publication Date: 2015-03-27
    Description: Paired individuals are expected to leave their current partner for newly encountered ones of higher quality. In such cases, animals should therefore be able to compare the quality of their current partner to the quality of a new prospective mate next to the couple. We tested this prediction in Gammarus pulex , an amphipod species where paired males have been described to switch females before copulation. Contrary to expectations, a majority of males remained paired to their current female when presented to an unpaired female of higher quality. In fact, males did not seem to compare the quality of the 2 females before switching. They rather based their decision on the quality of their current female only, switching when it was of low quality. We suggest that mate switching functions as a male mate choice strategy under strong competition for female access in G. pulex . Unpaired males may first randomly pair with a female to gather information about its quality as a mate before switching for a new female when the expected quality of unpaired females in the population exceeds that of their current partner.
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  • 198
    Publication Date: 2015-03-27
    Description: Advancements in GPS radiotelemetry allow collection of vast data for a variety of species including those for which direct observations are typically not feasible. Predicting behavior from telemetry data is possible, but telemetry fix rate can influence inferences, and animal behavior itself can affect fix success. We use multinomial regression to predict behavior from GPS radiocollar data field validated with behavioral state information. Our study organism was a facultative carnivore, the grizzly bear ( Ursus arctos ) ( n = 10) from a threatened population in Alberta, Canada, monitored during 2008–2010. Models using GPS cluster parameters alone successfully predicted ungulate consumption, whereas bear bedding was sufficiently identified by models that included site-level information. Predicting more complex behaviors required models incorporating both cluster parameters and habitat characteristics. No model reliably predicted vegetation feeding, probably because this activity is shorter than the time required for cluster formation. Models built using infrequent fix rates underestimated all behaviors, with bear presence at ungulate carcass sites least sensitive to fix rate variability. Behavior influenced fix success, with highest fix acquisition occurring when bears fed on vegetation. Placing predictions into a conservation context, we show that grizzly bears modify their behavior as they move through a landscape with complex human-activity patterns on reclaimed open-pit mines, foothill, and mountain regions. The modeling approach we tested needs further applications across species and ecosystems including behavioral monitoring, quantifying activity budgeting, and identifying areas/habitats important for specific behaviors that may warrant conservation.
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  • 199
    Publication Date: 2015-03-27
    Description: "Ecosystem engineering" describes habitat alteration by an organism that affects another organism; such nontrophic interactions between organisms are a current focus in ecological research. Our study quantifies the actual impact an ecosystem engineer can have on another species by using a previously identified model system—peccaries and rainforest frogs. In a 4-year experiment, we simulated the impact of peccaries on a population of Allobates femoralis (Dendrobatidae) by installing an array of artificial pools to mimic a forest patch modified by peccaries. The data were analyzed using a gradual before-after control-impact (gBACI) model. Following the supplementation, population size almost doubled as a result of increased autochthonous recruitment driven by a higher per-capita reproduction of males and a higher proportion of reproducing females. The effect was evenly distributed across the population. The differential response of males and females reflects the reproductive behavior of A. femoralis , as only the males use the aquatic sites for tadpole deposition. Our study shows that management and conservation must consider nontrophic relationships and that human "ecosystem engineering" can play a vital role in efforts against the "global amphibian decline."
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  • 200
    Publication Date: 2015-03-27
    Description: Particularly in species with biparental care and low levels of extrapair paternity, sexual traits that honestly indicate phenotypic and genetic quality are expected. We investigated in the brown booby, Sula leucogaster , whether gular color displayed by males during courtship is related to direct or indirect benefits to females. We performed a cross-fostering experiment in order to identify the relative contribution of parental care and genetic effects on offspring condition. We found that rearing father gular color was positively related to parental care (offspring attendance and provisioning) and chick body mass increase, whereas the genetic father gular color was related to chick structural growth. Contrary to expectations, females paired to more colorful males laid smaller eggs and did not increase parental care. Interestingly, chicks from genetic mothers with more colorful gulars and chicks that hatched from larger eggs "begged" at higher rates to mothers than to fathers. Overall, the results suggest that male gular color may provide females with reliable information on mate genetic quality and parenting abilities.
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