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Experimental demonstration that offspring sex ratio varies with maternal condition

TLDR
Experimental evidence is provided of an adaptive, facultative adjustment of sex ratio in response to changes in maternal condition in wild birds, which is commonly tested in wild populations.
Abstract
Sex ratio theory predicts that, if prevailing ecological or social circumstances differentially influence the fitness benefits of offspring of each sex, parents should adjust their production accordingly to maximize fitness. For species in which sex is chromosomally determined, such as birds and mammals, a differential effect of maternal condition on the fitness of male and female young is one important route whereby selection is expected to favor a bias in the offspring sex ratio at birth or egg laying. However, despite its central place in sex allocation theory, this hypothesis has rarely been tested in wild populations. We manipulated maternal condition upward and downward in a sexually dimorphic wild bird and examined the effect on offspring survival and on offspring sex ratio. The survival to fledging of male, but not female, young was substantially reduced if they came from less well provisioned eggs produced by females in relatively poor condition. As female condition, and thereby her capacity to produce high quality eggs, declined, she progressively skewed the sex ratio of her eggs toward females; i.e., she produced more of the sex with the higher survival prospects. The decline in the survival of male offspring, and the sex ratio bias, was removed when maternal condition was enhanced. These results provide experimental evidence of an adaptive, facultative adjustment of sex ratio in response to changes in maternal condition in wild birds.

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Early growth conditions, phenotypic development and environmental change.

TL;DR: This paper outlines how the different paradigms applied in this field relate to each other, the main predictions that they produce and the kinds of experimental data needed to distinguish among competing hypotheses, and examines evidence from mechanistic and functional avian studies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Growing apart: an ontogenetic perspective on the evolution of sexual size dimorphism

TL;DR: Of special interest are the constraints that a shared gene pool imposes on sex-specific modifications of growth and the ways that males and females overcome these constraints in response to divergent selection pressures.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ultraviolet colour variation influences blue tit sex ratios

TL;DR: Experimental evidence that females skew the sex ratio of their offspring in response to the ultraviolet plumage ornamentation of their mates is reported, suggesting that chromosomal sex determination may not constrain the sex ratios of multiparous vertebrates.
Journal ArticleDOI

Natural Selection and Sex Differences in Morbidity and Mortality in Early Life

TL;DR: This paper argues that the sex difference in early vulnerability can be attributed to the natural selection of optimal maternal strategies for maximizing lifetime reproductive success, as modelled previously by Trivers and Willard.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Natural selection of parental ability to vary the sex ratio of offspring.

TL;DR: Theory and data suggest that a male in good condition at the end of the period of parental investment is expected to outreproduce a sister in similar condition, while she is expectedto outre produce him if both are in poor condition, and natural selection should favor parental ability to adjust the sex ratio of offspring produced according to parental able to invest.
Book

The evolution of parental care

TL;DR: This paper examined the evolution of variation in egg and neonate size, of viviparity and other forms of bearing, and of differences in the duration of incubation, gestation, and lactation.
Book

The theory of sex allocation

TL;DR: This book is the first comprehensive treatment of sex allocation from the standpoint of modern evolutionary theory, showing how the determination of sex ratio, resource allocation to sperm versus egg within simultaneous hermaphroditism, and the evolution of sex reversal can be explained as examples of a single process.
Book

GLIM for ecologists

TL;DR: The GLIM language as mentioned in this paper is a language for experimental design that uses linear models and linear models with anova and GLIM analysis of Covariance in GLIM Linear Models Model Simplification Model Criticism Analysing Count Data: Poisson Errors AnalysING Proportion Data: Binomial Errors Binary Response Variables Data with Gamma Errors Survival Data Ecological Techniques What GLIM Doesn't Do Programming in GlIM Technical Appendices Statistical Tables Library of GLIM Programmes and Macros (on disk)
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