Experimentally increased prebreeding male social behaviour has no effect on female breeding phenology and performance


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Authors: Cornell, A; Hou, JJ; Williams, TD
Year: 2017
Journal: Animal Behaviour 126: 243-251   Article Link (DOI)
Title: Experimentally increased prebreeding male social behaviour has no effect on female breeding phenology and performance
Abstract: In the context of breeding phenology, social behaviour (especially song) has long been considered an important 'supplemental cue' that females integrate with other environmental information to determine timing of egg laying. However, to our knowledge, no studies have experimentally manipulated song in the wild in the context of female breeding phenology and performance. We studied natural variation in, and response to experimental manipulation of, prebreeding song and social behaviour in European starlings, Sturnus vulgaris, to determine whether male behaviour acts as a phenological cue determining female timing of egg laying and subsequent, postlaying breeding performance. In our highly synchronous system, natural variation in prebreeding male song quality and singing effort was surprisingly high, and singing increased slightly closer to egg-laying date. There was a strong prebreeding response of both males and females to the playback treatment, but no effect on female breeding phenology (egg-laying date) or performance (nestbox occupancy, egg size, clutch size, total chicks hatched, total chicks fledged or double-brooding behaviour). Our 3-year study finds no evidence that male prebreeding song is a cue determining female breeding phenology or performance in starlings. (C) 2017 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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