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Journal ArticleDOI

Delayed maturation in plumage colour: evidence for the female-mimicry hypothesis in the kestrel

TLDR
The results suggest that there is an adaptive value in possessing a female-like plumage colour in the breeding season, rather than the status-signalling hypothesis, because young males successfully deceived older males by their plumage.
Abstract
In many sexually dichromatic species, young males have female-like plumage during their first potential breeding year. The female-mimicry hypothesis (FMH) supposes that by possessing female-like plumage young males deceive older conspicuous males into believing that they are females, thus reducing competition from adult males. The status-signalling hypothesis (SSH) supposes that adult males can distinguish sex, but postulates that young males reduce competition from adult males by reliably signaling low status with their dull plumage. We tested these hypotheses in the European kestrel (Falco tinnunculus). Female-like young males settled to breed closer to adult males than did other adult males (Figs. 1a, b). By settling near adult males, young males seemed to increase their chance of mating with adult females. Adult female-young male pairs had better reproductive success than yearling-yearling pairs. These results suggest that there is an adaptive value in possessing a female-like plumage colour in the breeding season. To test the FMH, we measured sexual preference of adult males when adult females and young males were simultaneously shown in an aviary. Adult males were unable to recognize sex, because in half the cases they preferred young males (Fig. 3). However, when adult males and females were shown simultaneously, males preferred females (Fig. 2). Our results support the FMH rather than the SSH, because young males successfully deceived older males by their plumage.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Food limitation on brood size: experimental evidence in the eurasian kestrel

TL;DR: While females adjusted parental effort to male provisioning and offspring requirements, males did not change parental- effort within a season, suggesting that male parental effort is fixed at a level where male survival is not jeopardized.
Journal ArticleDOI

Clutch size of kestrels : seasonal decline and experimental evidence for food limitation under fluctuating food conditions

TL;DR: The result, that variation in food abundance can alter the relationship between clutch size and laying date, supports the quality hypothesis (that differences in quality between individual birds and/or their territories may result in the seasonal decline of clutch size) and suggests that food is limiting clutch size in kestrels both during the egg-laying and nestling periods, and not only at low but also at high levels of natural food abundance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Delayed plumage maturation and delayed reproductive investment in birds

TL;DR: Evidence suggests that delayed plumage maturation is not a consequence of developmental constraints and instead represents a strategy to maximize reproductive success in circumstances where young adults cannot effectively compete with older adults for limited resources, particularly breeding opportunities.
Journal ArticleDOI

A melanin-based trait reflects environmental growth conditions of nestling male Eurasian kestrels

TL;DR: Results indicate that this melanin-based trait reflects the environmental conditions in which the nestlings grew up, and did not correlate with T-cell mediated immune response.
References
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Book ChapterDOI

Parental investment and sexual selection

TL;DR: The p,cnetics of sex nas now becn clarif ied, and Fishcr ( 1958 ) hrs produccd , n,od"l to cxplarn sex ratios at coDception, a nrodel recently extendcd to include special mccha_ nisms that operate under inbreeding (Hunrilron I96?).
Journal ArticleDOI

Heritable true fitness and bright birds: a role for parasites?

TL;DR: In this paper, a combination of seven surveys of blood parasites in North American passerines reveals weak, highly significant association over species between incidence of chronic blood infections (five genera of protozoa and one nematode) and striking display (three characters: male "brightness", female "brights", and male song).
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