Rapid adaptive adjustment of parental care coincident with altered migratory behaviour

The optimal duration of parental care is shaped by the trade-off between investment in current and expected future reproductive success. A change in migratory behaviour is expected to affect the optimal duration of parental care, because migration and non-migration differ in expectations of future r...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Evolutionary Ecology
Main Authors: Jonker, R.M., Kurvers, R.H.J.M., van de Bilt, A., Faber, M., van Wieren, S.E., Prins, H.H.T., Ydenberg, R.C.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2012
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Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/rapid-adaptive-adjustment-of-parental-care-coincident-with-altere
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10682-011-9514-6
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Summary:The optimal duration of parental care is shaped by the trade-off between investment in current and expected future reproductive success. A change in migratory behaviour is expected to affect the optimal duration of parental care, because migration and non-migration differ in expectations of future reproductive success as a result of differential adult and/or offspring mortality. Here we studied how a recent emergence of non-migratory behaviour has affected the duration of parental care in the previously (until the 1980s) strictly migratory Russian breeding population of the barnacle geese Branta leucopsis. As a measure of parental care, we compared the vigilance behaviour of parents and non-parents in both migratory and non-migratory barnacle geese throughout the season. We estimated the duration of parental care at 233 days for migratory and 183 days for non-migratory barnacle geese. This constitutes a shortening of the duration of parental care of 21% in 25 years. Barnacle geese are thus able to rapidly adapt their parental care behaviour to ecological conditions associated with altered migratory behaviour. Our study demonstrates that a termination of migratory behaviour resulted in a drastic reduction in parental care and highlights the importance of studying the ecological and behavioural consequences of changes in migratory behaviour and the consequences of these changes for life-history evolution