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Mothers adjust offspring sex to match the quality of the rearing environment

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posted on 2012-10-07, 00:00 authored by S Pryke, Lee Rollins
Theory predicts that mothers should adjust offspring sex ratios when the expected fitness gains or rearing costs differ between sons and daughters. Recent empirical work has linked biased offspring sex ratios to environmental quality via changes in relative maternal condition. It is unclear, however, whether females can manipulate offspring sex ratios in response to environmental quality alone (i.e. independent of maternal condition). We used a balanced within-female experimental design (i.e. females bred on both low- and high-quality diets) to show that female parrot finches (<i>Erythrura trichroa</i>) manipulate primary offspring sex ratios to the quality of the rearing environment, and not to their own body condition and health. Individual females produced an unbiased sex ratio on high-quality diets, but over-produced sons in poor dietary conditions, even though they maintained similar condition between diet treatments. Despite the lack of sexual size dimorphism, such sex ratio adjustment is in line with predictions from sex allocation theory because nutritionally stressed foster sons were healthier, grew faster and were more likely to survive than daughters. These findings suggest that mothers may adaptively adjust offspring sex ratios to optimally match their offspring to the expected quality of the rearing environment.

History

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Location

London, England

Open access

  • Yes

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2012, Royal Society Publishing

Journal

Proceedings of the Royal Society B : biological sciences

Volume

279

Pagination

4051 - 4057

ISSN

0962-8452