Sex-specific relationships between urbanization, parasitism, and plumage coloration in house finches

Author:

Sykes Brooke E1,Hutton Pierce1,McGraw Kevin J1

Affiliation:

1. School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, 85287, USA

Abstract

Abstract Historically, studies of condition-dependent signals in animals have been male-centric, but recent work suggests that female ornaments can also communicate individual quality (e.g., disease state, fecundity). There also has been a surge of interest in how urbanization alters signaling traits, but we know little about if and how cities affect signal expression in female animals. We measured carotenoid-based plumage coloration and coccidian (Isospora spp.) parasite burden in desert and city populations of house finches Haemorhous mexicanus to examine links between urbanization, health state, and feather pigmentation in males and females. In earlier work, we showed that male house finches are less colorful and more parasitized in the city, and we again detected such patterns in this study for males; however, urban females were less colorful, but not more parasitized, than rural females. Moreover, contrary to rural populations, we found that urban birds (regardless of sex) with larger patches of carotenoid coloration were also more heavily infected with coccidia. These results show that urban environments can disrupt condition-dependent color expression and highlight the need for more studies on how cities affect disease and signaling traits in both male and female animals.

Funder

Barrett the Honors College

School of Life Sciences

Arizona State University

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology

Reference75 articles.

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