Data from: Kin grouping is insufficient to explain the inclusive fitness gains of conspecific brood parasitism in the common eider

Conspecific brood parasitism allows females to exploit other females’ nests and enhance their reproductive output. Here, we test a recent theoretical model of how host females gain inclusive fitness from brood parasitism. High levels of relatedness between host and parasitizer can be maintained eith...

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Main Authors: Hervey, Samuel, Barnas, Andrew, Stechmann, Tanner, Rockwell, Robert, Ellis-Felege, Susan N., Darby, Brian J.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: UND Scholarly Commons 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://commons.und.edu/data/22
https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.6b5r458
https://commons.und.edu/context/data/article/1021/type/native/viewcontent/doi_10.5061_dryad.6b5r458__v2.zip
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author Hervey, Samuel
Barnas, Andrew
Stechmann, Tanner
Rockwell, Robert
Ellis-Felege, Susan N.
Darby, Brian J.
author_facet Hervey, Samuel
Barnas, Andrew
Stechmann, Tanner
Rockwell, Robert
Ellis-Felege, Susan N.
Darby, Brian J.
author_sort Hervey, Samuel
collection UND Scholarly Commons (University of North Dakota)
description Conspecific brood parasitism allows females to exploit other females’ nests and enhance their reproductive output. Here, we test a recent theoretical model of how host females gain inclusive fitness from brood parasitism. High levels of relatedness between host and parasitizer can be maintained either by; 1) kin recognizing and parasitizing each other as a form of cooperative breeding or 2) natal philopatry and nest site fidelity facilitating the formation of kin groups increasing the probability of parasitism between relatives nesting in close proximity. To address these two hypotheses we genotyped feathers and hatch membranes of common eiders (Somateria mollissima) from western Hudson Bay, using a non-invasive sampling methodology. We found that most instances of brood parasitism do result in inclusive fitness gains. However, a greater inclusive fitness was gained toward the host when she was parasitized by individuals with no nest of their own compared to those that parasitize and nest. Further, females with failed nests moved an average of 492 meters from their previous years nest site, while successful females only moved an average of 13 meters. Therefore, we observed host-parasite relatedness can occur at levels higher than would be expected by chance even in the absence of kin grouping suggesting that closely related females nesting near one another is not essential to maintain high host-parasitizer relatedness. In addition, kin grouping is only a transient phenomenon that cannot occur every year due to the propensity for females of failed nests to nest farther away from their nest site in subsequent years than females with successful nests, which provides support for kin recognition as a more likely mechanism to maintain high host-parasitizer relatedness over time.
format Text
genre Common Eider
Hudson Bay
Somateria mollissima
genre_facet Common Eider
Hudson Bay
Somateria mollissima
geographic Hudson
Hudson Bay
geographic_facet Hudson
Hudson Bay
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spelling ftunivndakota:oai:commons.und.edu:data-1021 2025-04-27T14:27:37+00:00 Data from: Kin grouping is insufficient to explain the inclusive fitness gains of conspecific brood parasitism in the common eider Hervey, Samuel Barnas, Andrew Stechmann, Tanner Rockwell, Robert Ellis-Felege, Susan N. Darby, Brian J. 2019-10-02T07:00:00Z application/zip https://commons.und.edu/data/22 https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.6b5r458 https://commons.und.edu/context/data/article/1021/type/native/viewcontent/doi_10.5061_dryad.6b5r458__v2.zip unknown UND Scholarly Commons https://commons.und.edu/data/22 doi:10.5061/dryad.6b5r458 https://commons.und.edu/context/data/article/1021/type/native/viewcontent/doi_10.5061_dryad.6b5r458__v2.zip https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ Datasets common eider cooperative breeding Inclusive fitness kin grouping nest parasitism nest site fidelity Somateria mollissima text 2019 ftunivndakota https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.6b5r458 2025-03-31T04:27:23Z Conspecific brood parasitism allows females to exploit other females’ nests and enhance their reproductive output. Here, we test a recent theoretical model of how host females gain inclusive fitness from brood parasitism. High levels of relatedness between host and parasitizer can be maintained either by; 1) kin recognizing and parasitizing each other as a form of cooperative breeding or 2) natal philopatry and nest site fidelity facilitating the formation of kin groups increasing the probability of parasitism between relatives nesting in close proximity. To address these two hypotheses we genotyped feathers and hatch membranes of common eiders (Somateria mollissima) from western Hudson Bay, using a non-invasive sampling methodology. We found that most instances of brood parasitism do result in inclusive fitness gains. However, a greater inclusive fitness was gained toward the host when she was parasitized by individuals with no nest of their own compared to those that parasitize and nest. Further, females with failed nests moved an average of 492 meters from their previous years nest site, while successful females only moved an average of 13 meters. Therefore, we observed host-parasite relatedness can occur at levels higher than would be expected by chance even in the absence of kin grouping suggesting that closely related females nesting near one another is not essential to maintain high host-parasitizer relatedness. In addition, kin grouping is only a transient phenomenon that cannot occur every year due to the propensity for females of failed nests to nest farther away from their nest site in subsequent years than females with successful nests, which provides support for kin recognition as a more likely mechanism to maintain high host-parasitizer relatedness over time. Text Common Eider Hudson Bay Somateria mollissima UND Scholarly Commons (University of North Dakota) Hudson Hudson Bay
spellingShingle common eider
cooperative breeding
Inclusive fitness
kin grouping
nest parasitism
nest site fidelity
Somateria mollissima
Hervey, Samuel
Barnas, Andrew
Stechmann, Tanner
Rockwell, Robert
Ellis-Felege, Susan N.
Darby, Brian J.
Data from: Kin grouping is insufficient to explain the inclusive fitness gains of conspecific brood parasitism in the common eider
title Data from: Kin grouping is insufficient to explain the inclusive fitness gains of conspecific brood parasitism in the common eider
title_full Data from: Kin grouping is insufficient to explain the inclusive fitness gains of conspecific brood parasitism in the common eider
title_fullStr Data from: Kin grouping is insufficient to explain the inclusive fitness gains of conspecific brood parasitism in the common eider
title_full_unstemmed Data from: Kin grouping is insufficient to explain the inclusive fitness gains of conspecific brood parasitism in the common eider
title_short Data from: Kin grouping is insufficient to explain the inclusive fitness gains of conspecific brood parasitism in the common eider
title_sort data from: kin grouping is insufficient to explain the inclusive fitness gains of conspecific brood parasitism in the common eider
topic common eider
cooperative breeding
Inclusive fitness
kin grouping
nest parasitism
nest site fidelity
Somateria mollissima
topic_facet common eider
cooperative breeding
Inclusive fitness
kin grouping
nest parasitism
nest site fidelity
Somateria mollissima
url https://commons.und.edu/data/22
https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.6b5r458
https://commons.und.edu/context/data/article/1021/type/native/viewcontent/doi_10.5061_dryad.6b5r458__v2.zip