Low heritability of social phenotypes in a nonpasserine waterbird

Abstract Most behavioral traits are known to be weakly heritable, possibly due to their extreme complexity and flexibility. Despite this general pattern, within-species variation in avian colony size choice has been reported to have a strong additive genetic component, but we are aware of no attempt...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Current Zoology
Main Authors: Minias, Piotr, Drzewińska-Chańko, Joanna, Włodarczyk, Radosław
Other Authors: Swanson, David, National Science Foundation
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Oxford University Press (OUP) 2023
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/cz/zoad024
https://academic.oup.com/cz/advance-article-pdf/doi/10.1093/cz/zoad024/50888380/zoad024.pdf
https://academic.oup.com/cz/article-pdf/70/4/465/58877181/zoad024.pdf
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Summary:Abstract Most behavioral traits are known to be weakly heritable, possibly due to their extreme complexity and flexibility. Despite this general pattern, within-species variation in avian colony size choice has been reported to have a strong additive genetic component, but we are aware of no attempts to assess the heritability of avian sociality at the finer spatial scale. Here, we used an animal model and parent–offspring regression to quantify additive genetic variance in social phenotype (local nesting density) in a nonpasserine waterbird, the common tern Sterna hirundo. For this purpose, we used a novel experimental framework, where variation in the social environment was generated by providing birds with artificial patches of attractive nesting substrate that markedly varied in size. During 2011–2019, we collected data on social preferences for either low or high nesting density in over 250 individuals, either kin (mostly parent–offspring relationships) or non-kin recorded breeding multiple times across years. All heritability estimates of local nesting density were low (<0.10), irrespectively of fixed effects (sex and year) included in the models, data used in the modeling (all individuals vs. early recruits), or methodological approach (animal model vs. parent–offspring regression). We conclude that avian sociality, as measured at the local scale, may be much less heritable than colony size choice, as measured at the landscape level. Our study adds to the understanding of additive genetic variance in avian behavior, and it underlines a scale dependency in the heritability of behavioral traits.