Despite avid interest in life history trade-offs and the costs of reproduction, evidence that increased parental allocation reduces subsequent breeding productivity is mixed. This uncertainty may be attributable to environmental heterogeneity in space and time, necessitating experiments across a range of ecological contexts. Over three breeding seasons, we cross-fostered clutches between nests to manipulate incubation duration in a wild population of Carolina wrens, a species in which only females incubate, to test for a cost of incubation on current and future reproduction. Prolonged incubation affected maternal productivity in a manner dependent on the current environment and initial investment in eggs, suggesting that incubation is optimized according to other components of reproduction and individual quality. Effects of incubation duration on foster nestling condition varied between years, being costly in one, beneficial in another, and neutral in the third. The proportion of young fledged, females’ probability of breeding again within seasons, and subsequent clutch sizes all declined with increasing incubation effort—effects that became more pronounced as seasons progressed. Therefore, costs of incubation were almost entirely dependent on maternal quality and environmental variation, illustrating the importance of conducting experiments across a range of environmental settings for understanding the costs of reproduction and evolution of life histories.
Individual Optimization of Reproductive Investment and the Cost of Incubation in a Wild Songbird
Kelly D Miller,Ashley J. Atkins Coleman,Kelly L. O'Neil,Alexander J. Mueller,Rin D. Pell,E. K. Bowers
Published 2023 in American Naturalist
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- Publication year
2023
- Venue
American Naturalist
- Publication date
2023-09-29
- Fields of study
Biology, Medicine, Environmental Science
- Identifiers
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- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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