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Mating opportunities,paternity, and sexual conflict: paternal care in northern and southern temperate house wrens
Authors:Email author" target="_blank">Katie?LaBarberaEmail author  Irby?John?Lovette  Paulo?Emilio?Llambías
Institution:1.Fuller Evolutionary Biology Program,Cornell Lab of Ornithology,Ithaca,USA;2.Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology,Cornell University,Ithaca,USA;3.Ecología del Comportamiento Animal, Instituto Argentino de Investigaciones de las Zonas áridas, Centro Científico Tecnológico-Mendoza, Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas de la Argentina (CCT-Mendoza CONICET), Avenida Ruiz Leal s/n Parque General San Martin,Mendoza,Argentina;4.Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, 3101 Valley Life Sciences Building, University of California at Berkeley,Berkeley,USA
Abstract:Males are generally predicted to care less for their young when they have more additional mating opportunities, lower paternity, or when their mates care more. We tested these predictions using male provisioning as a proxy for paternal care in two temperate populations of house wrens (Troglodytes aedon) with divergent life histories. Males in the migratory, occasionally socially polygynous New York, USA (northern) population provisioned less when more local females were fertile. A similar relationship was only weakly supported in the resident, socially monogamous Buenos Aires Province, Argentina (southern) population, possibly due to the higher density of house wrens there. A relationship between male provisioning and level of paternity within the brood was supported in both populations, but in opposite directions: while males in the southern population provisioned less at broods containing more extra-pair young, males in the northern population provisioned such broods more, contradicting predictions. Males provisioned less when their mates provisioned more in both populations, in agreement with sexual conflict theory. Additionally, the populations both exhibited a positive relationship between male provisioning and nestling age, but differed in the direction of the relationships of male provisioning with date and brood size. Our results suggest that even within a species, life history differences may be accompanied by differences in the determinants of behavior such as paternal care.
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