Genetic structure confirms female-biased natal dispersal in the White-tailed Eagle population of the Carpathian Basin

Individuals can avoid inbreeding or competition with kin via long-distance natal dispersal. On the other hand, staying close to the well-known natal area may be a safer choice with respect to recruiting opportunities, reproductive success and the individual’s survival probability as well. Natal disp...

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Published in:Acta Zoologica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae
Main Authors: Nemesházi, Edina, Szabó, Krisztián, Horváth, Zoltán, Kövér, Szilvia
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Hungarian Natural History Museum 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://real.mtak.hu/82738/
https://real.mtak.hu/82738/1/ActaZH_2018_Vol_64_3_243.pdf
https://doi.org/10.17109/AZH.64.3.243.2018
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spelling ftmtak:oai:real.mtak.hu:82738 2024-04-07T07:56:25+00:00 Genetic structure confirms female-biased natal dispersal in the White-tailed Eagle population of the Carpathian Basin Nemesházi, Edina Szabó, Krisztián Horváth, Zoltán Kövér, Szilvia 2018 text https://real.mtak.hu/82738/ https://real.mtak.hu/82738/1/ActaZH_2018_Vol_64_3_243.pdf https://doi.org/10.17109/AZH.64.3.243.2018 en eng Hungarian Natural History Museum https://real.mtak.hu/82738/1/ActaZH_2018_Vol_64_3_243.pdf Nemesházi, Edina and Szabó, Krisztián and Horváth, Zoltán and Kövér, Szilvia (2018) Genetic structure confirms female-biased natal dispersal in the White-tailed Eagle population of the Carpathian Basin. ACTA ZOOLOGICA ACADEMIAE SCIENTIARUM HUNGARICAE, 64 (3). pp. 243-257. ISSN 1217-8837 QL Zoology / állattan Article PeerReviewed info:eu-repo/semantics/article 2018 ftmtak https://doi.org/10.17109/AZH.64.3.243.2018 2024-03-13T02:17:03Z Individuals can avoid inbreeding or competition with kin via long-distance natal dispersal. On the other hand, staying close to the well-known natal area may be a safer choice with respect to recruiting opportunities, reproductive success and the individual’s survival probability as well. Natal dispersal strategy often differs between sexes, being generally female-biased in birds. We explored if the Carpathian Basin White-tailed Eagle population shows fine scale genetic structure and if it does, what is the extent of philopatry in the two sexes. We furthermore investigated sex bias in natal dispersal distance inferred from spatial distributions of genetically close relative breeding females and males. Spatial autocorrelation analyses failed to find fine-scale genetic structure, despite the species being known to be philopatric. Pairwise breeding distances of close relatives showed female bias according to Wilcoxon rank sum test. The median distance of two close relative females was 136 km, while it was only 38 km in males. Since White-tailed Eagles are known to be faithful to their breeding territory, we assumed that the breeding distance between an individual and its parents refers to the individual’s natal dispersal distance. Due to the same reason, the breeding distance of two siblings should also be related to their individual dispersal distances from their shared natal area. Therefore, we argue that the difference we found between sexes in pairwise breeding distances of close relatives stands for a female-biased natal dispersal. This bias may be a consequence of the species’ breeding strategy, and it decreases the inbreeding probability as well. Article in Journal/Newspaper White-tailed eagle MTAK: REAL (Library and Information Centre of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences Acta Zoologica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae 64 3 243 257
institution Open Polar
collection MTAK: REAL (Library and Information Centre of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences
op_collection_id ftmtak
language English
topic QL Zoology / állattan
spellingShingle QL Zoology / állattan
Nemesházi, Edina
Szabó, Krisztián
Horváth, Zoltán
Kövér, Szilvia
Genetic structure confirms female-biased natal dispersal in the White-tailed Eagle population of the Carpathian Basin
topic_facet QL Zoology / állattan
description Individuals can avoid inbreeding or competition with kin via long-distance natal dispersal. On the other hand, staying close to the well-known natal area may be a safer choice with respect to recruiting opportunities, reproductive success and the individual’s survival probability as well. Natal dispersal strategy often differs between sexes, being generally female-biased in birds. We explored if the Carpathian Basin White-tailed Eagle population shows fine scale genetic structure and if it does, what is the extent of philopatry in the two sexes. We furthermore investigated sex bias in natal dispersal distance inferred from spatial distributions of genetically close relative breeding females and males. Spatial autocorrelation analyses failed to find fine-scale genetic structure, despite the species being known to be philopatric. Pairwise breeding distances of close relatives showed female bias according to Wilcoxon rank sum test. The median distance of two close relative females was 136 km, while it was only 38 km in males. Since White-tailed Eagles are known to be faithful to their breeding territory, we assumed that the breeding distance between an individual and its parents refers to the individual’s natal dispersal distance. Due to the same reason, the breeding distance of two siblings should also be related to their individual dispersal distances from their shared natal area. Therefore, we argue that the difference we found between sexes in pairwise breeding distances of close relatives stands for a female-biased natal dispersal. This bias may be a consequence of the species’ breeding strategy, and it decreases the inbreeding probability as well.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Nemesházi, Edina
Szabó, Krisztián
Horváth, Zoltán
Kövér, Szilvia
author_facet Nemesházi, Edina
Szabó, Krisztián
Horváth, Zoltán
Kövér, Szilvia
author_sort Nemesházi, Edina
title Genetic structure confirms female-biased natal dispersal in the White-tailed Eagle population of the Carpathian Basin
title_short Genetic structure confirms female-biased natal dispersal in the White-tailed Eagle population of the Carpathian Basin
title_full Genetic structure confirms female-biased natal dispersal in the White-tailed Eagle population of the Carpathian Basin
title_fullStr Genetic structure confirms female-biased natal dispersal in the White-tailed Eagle population of the Carpathian Basin
title_full_unstemmed Genetic structure confirms female-biased natal dispersal in the White-tailed Eagle population of the Carpathian Basin
title_sort genetic structure confirms female-biased natal dispersal in the white-tailed eagle population of the carpathian basin
publisher Hungarian Natural History Museum
publishDate 2018
url https://real.mtak.hu/82738/
https://real.mtak.hu/82738/1/ActaZH_2018_Vol_64_3_243.pdf
https://doi.org/10.17109/AZH.64.3.243.2018
genre White-tailed eagle
genre_facet White-tailed eagle
op_relation https://real.mtak.hu/82738/1/ActaZH_2018_Vol_64_3_243.pdf
Nemesházi, Edina and Szabó, Krisztián and Horváth, Zoltán and Kövér, Szilvia (2018) Genetic structure confirms female-biased natal dispersal in the White-tailed Eagle population of the Carpathian Basin. ACTA ZOOLOGICA ACADEMIAE SCIENTIARUM HUNGARICAE, 64 (3). pp. 243-257. ISSN 1217-8837
op_doi https://doi.org/10.17109/AZH.64.3.243.2018
container_title Acta Zoologica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae
container_volume 64
container_issue 3
container_start_page 243
op_container_end_page 257
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