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Parental Care and Family Conflicts

Parental Care and Family Conflicts. Animal Families. Families are not collective units helping each other Instead interacting organisms are aligned insofar as this reflects their degree of relatedness Mothers are equally related to all their offspring

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Parental Care and Family Conflicts

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  1. Parental Care and Family Conflicts

  2. Animal Families • Families are not collective units helping each other • Instead interacting organisms are aligned insofar as this reflects their degree of relatedness • Mothers are equally related to all their offspring • But each sibling is more closely related to itself than either its siblings or parents • Offspring can compete with both present and future siblings

  3. Animal Families

  4. Parent-Offspring Conflict • Parental care differs amongst many species in the animal kingdom

  5. Parental Care and Animal Kingdoms

  6. Parental Care • Female care is the most common with internal fertilization and male care with external fertilization • Why does fertilization mode influence which sex cares?

  7. Parental Care and Fertilization • 3 hypothesis • 1) External fertilizers are more likely to be certain they are the fathers at the time of oviposition • They avoid all the sexual conflict between internal fertilizers • But it is not yet known whether paternity certainty is greater with external fertilization • And knowledge of fatherhood is likey species or mating system specific

  8. Parental Care and Fertilization • 3 hypothesis • 2) Internal fertilization gives the chance for males to desert females • Male fish who externally fertilize must wait on females to lay eggs • Rejected based on data • Most external fertilizers simultaneously release-so both have equal opportunities to desert

  9. Parental Care and Fertilization • 3 hypothesis • 3) Association with the embryos preadapts a sex for parental care • Internal fertilization, females are closely associated with the embryo • But in external fertilizers, eggs are laid in the males territory, and thus males are associated • Further, males will continue to defend territories to maximize further matings • BEST EXPLANATION

  10. Parental Investment • Any investment by the parent in an individual offspring that increases the offspring's chance of surviving at the cost of the parents ability to invest in other offspring • Includes • Guarding Fish guarding and mouth brooding • Feeding

  11. Parental Investment • What is the optimum parental investment per offspring? • Trade-off between offspring quantity and quality within a brood • More very tiny offspring • Less larger offspring

  12. Parental Investment • This is a common trade-off theme amongst broadcast spawning invertebrates • Many small offspring may overwhelm planktivorous predators allowing more to make it to larval stage- but few will survive because they are allocated to few resources • Fewer larger offspring chances them all getting eaten but those that make it have a higher chance of making it to adulthood

  13. Parental Investment • Wild vs Hatchery Reared Salmon • Salmon taken from the wild increase the mass of their eggs in hatcheries

  14. Parental Investment • But parents must also optimize their total reproductive output • Too large a brood can • Increase a parents chance of mortality • Reduce their future fecundity

  15. Parental Investment • When male gobies have to spend more time fanning their eggs by decreasing oxygen levels, they are more likely to abandon their next clutch

  16. Parental Investment • Opportunities of further matings can also influence parental investment • St Peter’s fish, mouth breeding cichlid

  17. Filial Cannabalism • It may also be beneficial to consume one’s own young to improve care for the others • Sergeant fish alternate between a mating phase and a parental phase • If male clutches are reduced by 75% on the first day of their parental phase, they are likely to cannibalize the rest of the brood and revert to mating phase

  18. Parental Investment • Females may also invest more when they are paired with an attractive male

  19. Sibling Rivalry and the Parent-Offspring Conflict • Intrabrood Conflict Parent 0.5 0.5 Offspring 1 1.0 Offspring 2 1.0 0.5

  20. Sibling Rivalry and the Parent-Offspring Conflict • Interbrood Conflict Parent 0.5 Current Offspring 1.0 0.5 0.5 Future Offspring 1.0

  21. Parent Offspring Conflict

  22. Evidence of Sibling Rivalry • Facultative Siblicide • Interbrood conflict and fur seals • In years of poor condition, 23% of pups are born while their older siblings are still being nursed • Many of these new pups either die of starvation or are killed when they are attacked by their sibling • Seal pups

  23. Evidence of Sibling Rivalry • Facultative siblicide • Intrabrood conflict and the blue-footed booby • Lay 2 eggs four days apart, so there is always an older sibling • The older chick has a size advantage • When food is rare, the younger chick rarely gets fed • When the older chick is 20-25% below its expected weight it attacks and pecks at its younger sibling causing them to be reluctant to beg for food

  24. Evidence of Sibling Rivalry • Sibling rivalry in osprey • Obligate siblicide • In some birds of prey, the older sibling always kills the younger sibling • So why do the parents lay two eggs at all?

  25. Sibling Relatedness Affects the Rivalry • As relatedness to other offspring declines, less related siblings become less genetically valuable, so the cost of depriving them of food decreases

  26. Sibling Relatedness Affects the Rivalry • Increased offspring selfishness when broodmates are of lower relatedness • Nestlings red mouth is a hunger signal • Birds with high rates of extra pair paternity have redder mouths • Nestlings also beg more vigorously in species with extra pair paternity

  27. Parent Offspring Conflict • Sibling Rivalry might sometimes benefit parents even if they are equally related to all offspring • Arms race between parents and siblings can be an extreme result of parent offspring conflict

  28. Parent Offspring Conflict • Brood hierarchies produced by asynchronous hatching result in higher fitness in lean periods

  29. Parent Offspring Conflict • Conflicts during pregnancy • Genomic imprinting- imprinted genes behave differently depending on which parent they come from • When females mate with many males, a male gene may act to sequester resources for the offspring in utero • Genes typically encode insulin like growth factors and their receptors

  30. Parent Offspring Conflict • Can this conflict be resolved? Or is an arms race and battleground necessary? • A resolution can occur when offspring demand and parental provisioning become co-adapted, and each develops honest signaling • A stable strategy involves offspring only increasing its demand with need, and parents requiring an honest signal for that need

  31. Parent Offspring Conflict • Example with Canaries • Nestling beg more vigorously when hungry and parents provide more food as begging signals increased • Nestlings didn’t beg extra because extra begging was shown to be costly • Siblings that begged for longer in an experiment has a lower mass gain

  32. Parent Offspring Conflict • Begging is also genetically encoded- so parent feeding and offspring begging are related • Chicks from more generous mothers tend to beg more than chicks from less generous mothers

  33. Brood Parasites • Brood parasites lay their eggs in the nest of others (hosts) and trick the hosts into providing all the parental care • Cuckoos • Parasitic offspring should behave exceptionally selfishly because they are unrelated to the host and the host offspring

  34. Brood Parasites • Sometimes these ‘parasites’ are tolerated • Cowbirds are also brood parasites • But they don’t expel the hosts young • The collective begging of the brood evokes a higher level of provisioning by host parents which cowbird chicks exploit by grabbing more food than the host’s young

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