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Ecology Lecture 11 Life History Patterns 2 Overview A mating system includes Types of mating systems how members of a particular species (or population) choose and bond with mates how many mates per individual how parental care (if it occurs) takes place. Monogamy: One male mates with one female Polygyny: One male mates with several females Polyandry: One female mates with several males “Social” vs. “genetic” monogamy Key principles The system that evolves depends upon the individual interests of each gender Male and female interests are often in conflict. Why? Differences in gamete investment and/or total parental investment Male “default” = ____________. Why? Is there a female default? Interests/behavior of one gender serve to constrain options available to the other gender. Polygyny Resource defense polygyny Example: African cichlid fish, Lamprologus callipterus Defended resource = shells in which females lay eggs Polygyny Female defense polygyny Example: Elephant seals (females aggregate) Photo: www.driftersister.com Polygyny Female defense polygyny Example: Elephant seals (males compete for beachmaster status) Photo: www.wetasschronicles.com Male-male competition and sexual dimorphism (seals) NOTE: Each point represents a species Polygyny Lek polygyny Males clump, but not due to another resource Males become the clumped resource! Example 1: satin bowerbirds Satin Bowerbirds: multiple signals of health and fitness (and good genes?) Polygyny Lek polygyny Example 2: bullfrogs Females choose males with longest, loudest and deepest calls But don’t forget the sneaky f--kers www.tc.umn.edu Polygyny: benefits/costs Male number of offspring likely to correlate with number of mates (+) Female: gets a high-quality male (+) gets less of the male’s time and attention for raising young being defended against predators Monogamy Common or rare? In which group of animals is it most common? www.magicmud.com Monogamy: alternate hypotheses Mate assistance: it takes two parents to raise the offspring Example: Adelie penguins Both parents needed for chick survival Monogamy: alternate hypotheses Mate guarding: guarding assures paternity; not guarding jeopardizes it Especially critical if females are rare or receptive for a limited time Example: many crab species (see sexual selection lecture) Monogamy: alternate hypotheses Female-enforced monogamy Similar to mateguarding, but done by female. Example: Burying beetles A female would lose resources, and possibly her offspring if she allows her male to mate again. www.royalbertmuseum.ca Monogamy: alternate hypotheses Danger “theory” Leaving increases chance of dying if predation rates are high. Example: The mantis shrimp Lysiosquilla sulcata Lysiosquilla sp. Opencage.info Mantis shrimp (another type) Monogamy: alternate hypotheses Pop ‘em out “theory” Highly fertile mate Not worth time/energy to seek another. Example: Djungarian hamsters bbs.petsky.com.cn Social Monogamy and extrapair copulations Extra-pair copulations can increase fitness of participants Males: More mates more offspring possible. Females: Historical (not current) ideas: no advantage for females Observational/experimental evidence: clear fitness benefits documented for some species Example: Yellow-toothed cavy Yellow-toothed cavy: Offspring survival as a function of multiple mates for females Social Monogamy and extrapair copulations Direct fitness benefits: genetically based Good genes Genetic compatibility What does this mean? What does this mean? Genetic variability among offspring Why important? Social Monogamy and extrapair copulations Other benefits that may improve fitness for females More resources hypothesis Example: Orange-rumped honeyguides swap food for sex. Better protection/care hypothesis Example: Dunnocks (European song bird) Mate with two males both care for young Infanticide reduction hypothesis Example: chimpanzees (who’s dad?) Polyandry (w/o polygyny) Spotted sandpipers: near-complete sexrole reversal Females arrive on breeding grounds; compete with other females for territories. Initial male arrives, mates, cares for her first clutch. Second male arrives later, mates, and cares for her second clutch. What circumstances promote polyandry? Female: only lays 4 eggs at once Add eggs (experimentally) decrease the total young successfully raised Female can reproductive success by laying a second brood Related to incubation effort and protection Needs second mate Reproductive success limited by mates rather than gametes in this case What circumstances promote polyandry? Why would males “comply?” Operational sex ratio biased toward males (related to absolute ratio for this species) She abandons Male 1: Certain of paternity for clutch 1; possibility of paternity for clutch 2 He stays offspring survive He leaves offspring die How is this possible? Male 2: Later arrivals less dominant, but still have a chance of paternity if they stay. What circumstances promote polyandry? Food fluctuation hypothesis In food-poor years, females put all energy into eggs and have no energy left for care of eggs/young. Mate assistance (by male) essential monogamy In food-rich years (i.e. many mayflies), the female “recovers” her body mass and can lay another batch Monogamy Polyandry What circumstances promote polyandry? Heavy predation pressure on nests Multiple nests assure that at least some young will survive. Male is needed to prevent predation Young will all be lost if he doesn’t stay. Patterns of reproductive effort Variations Numbers of young produced at a time More young = less parental investment/individual high mortality among young Care of eggs/larvae Variability in parental investment Type of young produced Precocial vs. altricial offspring (What is the difference?) Patterns of reproductive effort Variations (cont.) Number of reproductive events in a lifetime Semelparous: one big reproductive event in lifetime/many offspring Many are relatively short-lived (squid, annual plants) But some are long-lived (periodical cicadas) Itoparous: many reproductive events in lifetime/ fewer offspring per event. Common especially birds and mammals Timing is an issue: begin early materials/energy into reproduction, Begin later materials/energy into survival and growth “r” vs. “K” strategists “r”-strategists Semelparous Many offspring Little/no parental investment per individual offspring Relatively short lifespan Begin to reproduce relatively early in life Good colonizers of newly available habitat, but often not effective competitors “K”-strategists Itoparous Few offspring High levels of investment per individual offspring Relatively long lifespan Begin to reproduce relatively later in life Not usually colonizers, but arrive later in succession, compete successfully