The causes and implications of sex role diversity in shorebird breeding systems

Author:

Székely Tamás123ORCID,Carmona‐Isunza Maria C.4,Engel Noémie15ORCID,Halimubieke Naerhulan16ORCID,Jones William2ORCID,Kubelka Vojtĕch7,Rice Romy15,Tanner Claire E.1ORCID,Tóth Zsófia28ORCID,Valdebenito José O.91011ORCID,Wanders Kees1ORCID,McDonald Grant C.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Milner Centre for Evolution University of Bath Bath BA2 7AY UK

2. ELKH – DE Reproductive Strategies Research Group University of Debrecen Egyetem tér 1 H‐4032 Debrecen Hungary

3. Debrecen Biodiversity Centre University of Debrecen H‐4032, Vezér utca 37 Debrecen Hungary

4. Departamento de Ecología y Recursos Naturales, Facultad de Ciencias Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México Ciudad Universitaria C.P 04510 Ciudad de México Mexico

5. Maio Biodiversity Foundation 6110, Cidade do Porto Inglês Maio Cabo Verde

6. Department of Anthropology University College London London WC1H 0BW UK

7. Department of Zoology and Centre for Polar Ecology University of South Bohemia Branišovská 1760 České Budějovice 370 05 Czech Republic

8. Department of Biology Lund University Lund Sweden

9. Bird Ecology Lab, Instituto de Ciencias Marinas y Limnológicas Universidad Austral de Chile Independencia 631 Valdivia Chile

10. Millennium Institute Biodiversity of Antarctic and Subantarctic Ecosystems (BASE) Santiago Chile

11. Centro de Humedales Río Cruces (CEHUM) Universidad Austral de Chile Valdivia Chile

12. Department of Zoology University of Veterinary Medicine Budapest Hungary

Abstract

Males and females often exhibit different behaviours during mate acquisition, pair‐bonding and parenting, and a convenient label to characterize these behaviours is sex role. The diverse roles that male and female shorebirds (plovers, sandpipers and allies) exhibit in mating and parenting have played a key role in advancing mainstream theories in avian ecology and behavioural biology including sexual selection, sexual conflict and parental cooperation. Recent advances in shorebird research have also highlighted the significance of the social environment in driving sex role behaviours by linking the adult sex ratio with breeding behaviour and population demography. Here we review the key advances in sex role research using shorebirds as an ecological model system. We identify knowledge gaps and argue that shorebirds have untapped potential to accelerate diverse research fields including evolutionary genomics, movement ecology, social networks and environmental changes. Future studies of sex roles will benefit from individual‐based monitoring using advanced tracking technologies, and from multi‐team collaborations that are facilitated by standardized data collection methodologies across different species in the field. These advances will not only contribute to our understanding of reproductive strategies, but they will also have knock‐on effects on predicting population resilience to environmental changes and on prioritizing species for conservation.

Funder

Hungarian Scientific Research Fund

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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