Females with Increased Costs Maintain Reproductive Output: A Field Experiment in a Common Songbird

Author:

McDermott Molly T1ORCID,Madden Sage A12,Laubach Zachary M1,Ayala Marina J1,Safran Rebecca J1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Colorado at Boulder , Boulder 334 UCB, 1900 Pleasant Street, CO 80309 , USA

2. Graduate Group in Ecology, University of California , Davis, One Shields Avenue, Davis, CA 95616 , USA

Abstract

Synopsis Reproduction and self-maintenance are energetically costly activities involved in classic life history trade-offs. However, few studies have measured the responses of wild organisms to simultaneous changes in reproductive and self-maintenance costs, which may have interactive effects. In free-living female Barn Swallows (Hirundo rustica), we simultaneously manipulated reproductive costs (by adding or removing two nestlings) and self-maintenance costs (by attaching a ∼1 g weight in the form of a GPS tag to half of our study birds) and measured mass, immune status, blood glucose, feather growth, and reproductive output (likelihood of a second clutch, number of eggs, and time between clutches). GPS tags allowed us to analyze how movement range size affected response to brood size manipulation. Tagging altered females’ immune function as evidenced by an elevated heterophil to lymphocyte (H:L) ratio, but all females were equally likely to lay more eggs. There was no evidence of interactive effects of the tagging and brood size treatment. Range size was highly variable, and birds with large ranges grew feathers more slowly, but analyzing the effect of brood size manipulation while accounting for variation in range size did not result in any physiological response. Our results support the theoretical prediction that short-lived vertebrates do face a trade-off between reproduction and self-maintenance and, when faced with increased costs, tend to preserve investment in reproduction at the expense of parental condition. This experiment also helps us to understand how movement patterns may be relevant to life history trade-offs in wild birds.

Funder

NSF

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Plant Science,Animal Science and Zoology

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