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Frequency and timing of extrapair fertilisation in the polyandrous red phalarope (Phalaropus fulicarius)
Authors:James Dale  Robert Montgomerie  Denise Michaud  Peter Boag
Institution:(1) Section of Neurobiology and Behavior Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA, US;(2) Department of Biology Queen's University Kingston, Ontario, K7L 3N6, Canada e-mail: montgome@biology.queensu.ca Tel.: +1-613-5336127, Fax: +1-613-5336617 , CA
Abstract:In sequentially polyandrous bird species, where females mate with different males in succession during a single breeding season, sperm stored by females can occasionally lead to extrapair fertilisations (EPFs) in clutches cared for by the second and subsequent males. Thus, we predicted that in red phalaropes (Phalaropus fulicarius) – a sex-role-reversed, sequentially polyandrous, arctic breeding shorebird – EPFs would occur more frequently in clutches laid later in the breeding season. We used multilocus DNA profiling to examine the frequency and timing of EPFs in a population of red phalaropes breeding in the Canadian high arctic. Using a technique to determine parentage without maternal DNA, we inferred that 6 of 70 chicks in 18 broods resulted from EPFs – one extrapair chick in each of 6 broods. These results were supported by a further analysis using microsatellite DNA. As predicted, broods containing EPFs hatched from clutches laid significantly later in the season than did broods containing no EPFs. The difference in median hatch dates between broods with and without EPFs was 9.0 days, or 38% of the entire egg-laying period in that season. For the whole breeding season, we estimated that 6.5% of chicks were sired by extrapair males, which is similar to extrapair paternity estimates for other sex-role-reversed birds, but relatively low compared to the majority of socially monogamous species studied so far. Received: 24 August 1998 / Received in revised form: 18 January 1999 / Accepted: 24 January 1999
Keywords:Phalaropus  Polyandry  Sex role reversal  DNA profiling  Sperm storage  Paternity
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