Abstract

Animals that care for their offspring may vary the amount of care provided for a particular brood in relation to environmental conditions. Food availablity is one factor that may affect the costs and benefits associated with parental investment. The convict cichlid, Cichlasoma nigrofasciatum, is a small, substrate-spawning cichlid from Central America. Both male and female provide parental care for eggs and fry. Paris were kept at one of three ration levels, high, medium or low. Time spent in parental fanning by females was positively related to ration. Males spent less time fanning than females and their parental behaviour varied considerably between individuals. Males on the high ration spent slightly more time fanning than those on the lower rations. The number of eggs produced per spawning and the post-spawning weight of both males and females were significantly and positively related to ration. Foraging frequency of both males and females was inversely related to ration. There was no significant effect of ration on the frequency of mouthing eggs and young or on intra-pair aggression. Eggs of low-ration fish hatched earlier than those of medium- and high-ration fish but there was no significant difference in the number of days that the young survived. These results suggest that the allocation of time and effort between parental and maintenance activities differs in relation to food supply. Parents may provide more care for the large brood produced when food is plentiful but place more emphasis on their own survival when food is short and broods are small.

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