Abstract

Honest signaling mechanisms can function to appropriate care to hungry offspring and avoid misdirected care of unrelated offspring. Begging, the behavior by which offspring solicit food and parental care, may be an honest signaling mechanism for need, as well as association of parents and offspring. Roseate terns (Sterna dougallii) exhibit prolonged parental care during the postbreeding staging period, offering an ideal system in which to study begging as an honest signaling mechanism. We conducted focal sampling during two premigratory staging seasons (2014 and 2015) at Cape Cod National Seashore, Massachusetts, USA to determine whether postfledging tern begging behavior was an honest signal for need and parent–offspring association. Based on honest signaling theory, we expected begging behavior to be highest during times of high perceived need, and we expected to see a decrease in begging behavior as young terns became increasingly independent of the care‐giving parent. Also, we predicted that young terns would be more likely to beg at parents than nonparents. We found that young roseate terns begged at their parents more often than nonparents; however, they did not always beg at parents. Model predictions of begging probability showed a linear relationship between begging and time of day and date of season, such that begging increased with time of day and decreased with date of season, respectively. Our results provide evidence for honest parent–offspring interactions and are inconsistent with parent–offspring conflict theory but suggest that begging may play a complex role in postfledging parent–offspring interactions.OPEN RESEARCH BADGES This article has been awarded Open Data, Open materials Badges. All materials and data are publicly accessible via the Open Science Framework at https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.2656718.

Highlights

  • Begging, the behavior by which offspring solicit food and parental care, is a good model for studying parent–offspring conflict (POC)and the evolution of signaling

  • Our objectives were to (a) examine whether HY roseate terns begged at their attending parent more often than non‐ parents, and (b) determine how temporal variables affected begging behavior

  • To address our first hypothesis about the probability that HY beg‐ ging is directed at parents versus nonparents, we created a subset of our dataset of focal HY roseate terns that included only birds with known, uniquely marked parents that had been observed begging at an adult at least once

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Summary

Introduction

The behavior by which offspring solicit food and parental care, is a good model for studying parent–offspring conflict (POC)and the evolution of signaling. According to POC theory, conflict arises over the amount of parental investment provided, with off‐ spring soliciting more resources than parents are selected to give (Trivers, 1974). For this strategy to be evolutionarily stable, Ecology and Evolution. Costs of begging, which include energy expenditure (Godfray, 1991, 1995; Ogawa et al, 2015), loss of inclusive fitness (Rodríguez‐ Gironés, Cotton, & Kacelnik, 1996), and predator and possibly parasite attraction (Tomás & Soler, 2016), may limit this behavior and increase its reliability as an honest parent–offspring signaling mechanism (Levréro, Durand, Vignal, Blanc, & Mathevon, 2009). Begging may not be a costly behavior for fledged chicks, but this behavior may remain honest due to a rel‐ atively low payoff of cheating (e.g., begging at unrelated adults or soliciting more care than needed may not result in feeding; Zollman, Bergstrom, & Huttegger, 2013, Rich & Zollman, 2016)

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