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Prenatal environmental effects match offspring begging to parental provisioning
journal contribution
posted on 2009-01-01, 00:00 authored by C Hinde, Kate BuchananKate Buchanan, R KilnerThe solicitation behaviours performed by dependent young are under selection from the environment created by their parents, as well as wider ecological conditions. Here we show how mechanisms acting before hatching enable canary offspring to adapt their begging behaviour to a variable post-hatching world. Cross-fostering experiments revealed that canary nestling begging intensity is positively correlated with the provisioning level of their own parents (to foster chicks). When we experimentally increased food quality before and during egg laying, mothers showed higher faecal androgen levels and so did their nestlings, even when they were cross-fostered before hatching to be reared by foster mothers that had been exposed to a standard regime of food quality. Higher parental androgen levels were correlated with greater levels of post-hatching parental provisioning and (we have previously shown) increased faecal androgens in chicks were associated with greater begging intensity. We conclude that androgens mediate environmentally induced plasticity in the expression of both parental and offspring traits, which remain correlated as a result of prenatal effects, probably acting within the egg. Offspring can thus adapt their begging intensity to variable family and ecological environments.
History
Journal
Royal Society of London. Proceedings. Biological SciencesVolume
276Issue
1668Pagination
2787 - 2794Publisher
The Royal Society PublishingLocation
London, EnglandPublisher DOI
ISSN
0962-8452eISSN
1471-2954Language
engPublication classification
C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journalCopyright notice
2009, The Royal SocietyUsage metrics
Categories
No categories selectedKeywords
parental carematernal effectsparental effectsindirect genetic effectsparent–offspring conflictegg hormonesScience & TechnologyLife Sciences & BiomedicineBiologyEcologyEvolutionary BiologyLife Sciences & Biomedicine - Other TopicsEnvironmental Sciences & Ecologyparent-offspring conflictNESTLING TESTOSTERONEMATERNAL TESTOSTERONEFAMILY CONFLICTPIED FLYCATCHERGENETIC-BASISEVOLUTIONCOADAPTATIONYOLKGROWTHBIRD