Auteurs: Anders Pape Møller, Jan Tøttrup Nielsen
Bron:
Behavioral Ecology
(2014)
25
(6):
1505-1512.
doi:
10.1093/beheco/aru130
Abstract: Animals with parental care defend their offspring with an intensity
reflecting parental investment. Parental investment theory
predicts that parents should take risks relative to
their residual reproductive value. Therefore, parental defense should
change consistently with age reaching a peak at
middle age, and it should vary consistently with age at start and end of
reproduction.
We recorded the intensity of parental defense of
offspring in 410 female goshawks Accipiter gentilis throughout
their lives, ranging from timid females that barely approached a human
intruder at the nest to aggressive females
that physically attacked the human. Females were
consistent in their level of defense throughout life, and aggressive
females
were mated to aggressive males. Investment in
reproduction as reflected by laying date, clutch size, and brood size
showed
a bell-shaped relationship with age.
Females that
started to breed at a young age were less aggressive than females that
started
late. Likewise, females that finished reproduction
at a young age behaved less aggressively than females that finished at
an old age. The intensity of defense of offspring
peaked at an intermediate age followed by a decrease into old age and
senescence.
Females that started to breed early during the
season were more aggressive than late breeders. These findings are
consistent
with the hypothesis that the intensity of parental
defense of their offspring reflects parental investment and patterns of
aging.
donderdag 20 november 2014
Parental defense of offspring and life history of a long-lived raptor
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