Contrasting parental color morphs increase regularity of prey deliveries in an African raptor

Author:

Nebel Carina1ORCID,Sumasgutner Petra12ORCID,McPherson Shane C12,Tate Gareth J13ORCID,Amar Arjun1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology, DST-NRF Centre of Excellence, University of Cape Town, Private Bag X3, John Day Building, 7700 Rondebosch, Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa

2. Konrad Lorenz Research Centre, Core Facility for Behaviour and Cognition, University of Vienna, Fischerau 11, 4645 Grünau/Almtal, Austria

3. Endangered Wildlife Trust, Birds of Prey Programme, Glen Austin AH, Midrand, 1685 Gauteng, South Africa

Abstract

Abstract Disassortative mating in color-polymorphic raptors is a proposed mechanism for the maintenance of color polymorphism in populations. Selection for such a mating system may occur if there are fitness advantages of mating with a contrasting morph. In the black sparrowhawk (Accipiter melanoleucus), mixed-morph pairs may have a selective advantage because they produce offspring that have higher survival rates. Two hypotheses, which may explain the mechanism, are the “avoidance-image” and “complementarity” hypotheses. The first suggests that, within a predator’s territory, prey develop a search image for the more commonly encountered parental morph, for example, the male morph during incubation and brooding. Females of a contrasting morph to their partner would then have higher capture rates once they commence hunting in the later nestling phase. Thus, the “avoidance-image” hypothesis predicts higher provisioning rates for mixed-morph pairs. Alternatively, the “complementarity” hypothesis posits that different color morphs exploit different environmental conditions, allowing mixed-morph pairs to hunt under a wider range of conditions and predicts that food is delivered more consistently. We test these hypotheses using nest cameras to record prey delivery rates during the late nestling phase when both parents are hunting. We found support for the “complementarity” hypothesis, with mixed-morph pairs delivering food more consistently but not at a higher rate. This higher consistency in prey deliveries may explain the improved survival of the offspring of mixed-morph pairs and could, therefore, play a role in maintaining the stability of color polymorphism in this system.

Funder

DST-NRF Centre of Excellence for Invasion Biology

University of Cape Town

Claude Leon Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

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

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