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Primary sex ratio bias in an endangered cooperatively breeding bird, the Black-eared Miner, and its implications for conservation

journal contribution
posted on 2001-10-01, 00:00 authored by J Ewen, Rohan Clarke, E Moysey, R Boulton, R Crozier, M Clarke
The aim of our study was to investigate primary and adult sex ratios in the cooperatively breeding black-eared miner, Manorina melanotis. We used genetic methods to determine the sex of all birds. Observations were made to quantify differences in helping behaviour between the sexes. As in other miners, Manorina spp., non-breeding males provided most of the help in raising young. Male and female nestlings did not differ significantly in weight, suggesting that both sexes are equally costly to produce. Like other miners, the adult sex ratio in black-eared miners is male-biased (64.4%). However, unlike its congeners, the black-eared miner’s primary sex ratio was strongly biased toward females (62.5%). This suggests that females suffer higher juvenile mortality than males. Our study illustrates how understanding sex ratios is both of theoretical interest and relevant to biological conservation.

History

Journal

Biological conservation

Volume

101

Issue

2

Pagination

137 - 145

Publisher

Applied Science Publishers

Location

Barking, England

ISSN

0006-3207

eISSN

1873-2917

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2001, Elsevier Science Ltd.

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