Affiliation:
1. Animal Sciences, Wageningen University and Research Wageningen The Netherlands
2. Behavioural Biology, Groningen Institute for Evolutionary Life Sciences University of Groningen Groningen The Netherlands
Abstract
Abstract
Mothers who produce multiple offspring within one reproductive attempt often allocate resources differentially; some maternally derived substances are preferentially allocated to last-produced offspring and others to first-produced offspring. The combined effect of these different allocation regimes on the overall fitness of offspring produced early or late in the sequence is not well understood, partly because production order is often coupled with birth order, making it difficult-to-separate effects of pre-natal maternal allocation from those of post-natal social environments. In addition, very little is known about the influence of laying order on fitness in later life. In this study, we used a semi-natural captive colony of black-headed gulls to test whether an offspring's position in the laying order affected its early-life survival and later-life reproductive success, independent of its hatching order. Later-laid eggs were less likely to hatch, but among those that did, survival to adulthood was greater than that of first-laid eggs. In adulthood, the laying order of females did not affect their likelihood of breeding in the colony, but male offspring hatched from last-laid eggs were significantly less likely to gain a breeding position than earlier-laid males. In contrast, later-laid female parents hatched lower proportions of their clutches than first-laid females, but hatching success was unrelated to the laying order of male parents. Our results indicate that gull mothers induce complex and sex-specific effects on both the early survival of their offspring and on long-term reproductive success through laying order effects among eggs of the same breeding attempt.
Abstract
In spite of suffering lower hatching success, later-laid black-headed gull offspring do not experience a reduction in survival to adulthood. While males and females from last-laid eggs suffered reduced reproductive success, this affected different components of reproduction: males hatched from last-laid eggs were less likely to become breeders, whereas females from last-laid eggs had lower offspring hatching success in their first breeding attempt..
Funder
Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics