Fledging Mass Is Color Morph Specific and Affects Local Recruitment in a Wild Bird




Morosinotto Chiara, Brommer Jon E., Lindqvist Atte, Ahola Kari, Aaltonen Esa, Karstinen Teuvo, Karell Patrik

PublisherUNIV CHICAGO PRESS

2020

American Naturalist

AMERICAN NATURALIST

AM NAT

196

5

609

619

11

0003-0147

1537-5323

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1086/710708

https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/50504491



Early-life conditions may have long-lasting effects on life history. In color polymorphic species, morph-specific sensitivity to environmental conditions may lead to differential fitness. In tawny owls (Strix aluco), pheomelanin-based color polymorphism is expected to be maintained because the brown morph has higher adult fitness in warmer environments, while selection favors the gray morph under colder conditions. Here we investigate body mass at fledging and its consequences until adulthood in a population at the species' cold range margin. Using 40 years of data (1979-2017), we show that brown pairs, which mainly produce brown offspring consistent with a one-locus-two-alleles inheritance model, consistently raised heavier offspring than mixed (gray-brown) pairs and gray pairs. Offspring mass declined seasonally, except among offspring raised by brown pairs. Brown offspring could be heavier because of morph-specific parental care and/or offspring growth. Furthermore, mass at fledging is associated with fitness: the probability of local recruitment into the breeding population increased with higher mass at fledging, especially in mild winters and with favorable food conditions, although recruitment is not morph specific. Fledgling mass thus provides a fitness benefit in terms of recruitment probability that is modulated by environmental factors, which appear to level off any direct morph-specific recruitment benefits.

Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 12:49