Abstract

Floating males are usually thought of as nonbreeders. However, some floating individuals are able to reproduce through extra-pair copulations. Floater reproductive success can impact breeders’ sex ratio, reproductive variance, multiple paternity and inbreeding, particularly in small populations. Changes in reproductive variance alter the rate of genetic drift and loss of genetic diversity. Therefore, genetic management of threatened species requires an understanding of floater reproduction and determinants of floating behaviour to effectively conserve species. Here, we used a pedigreed, free-living population of the endangered New Zealand hihi (Notiomystis cincta) to assess variance in male reproductive success and test the genetic (inbreeding and heritability) and conditional (age and size) factors that influence floater behaviour and reproduction. Floater reproduction is common in this species. However, floater individuals have lower reproductive success and variance in reproductive success than territorial males (total and extra-pair fledglings), so their relative impact on the population's reproductive performance is low. Whether an individual becomes a floater, and if so then how successful they are, is determined mainly by individual age (young and old) and to lesser extents male size (small) and inbreeding level (inbred). Floating males have a small, but important role in population reproduction and persistence of threatened populations.

Highlights

  • In many species, competition for mates and territories among males results in some individuals remaining unpaired and without a territory, despite being physically capable of breeding (Smith and Arcese 1989)

  • Floaters can act as buffers or a reservoir against population size changes by rapidly replacing breeders (Grimm et al 2005), as reserves of genetic diversity (Perrier et al 2014) and as a warning system against population decline (Franklin 1992; Penteriani et al 2011)

  • We have shown that floating males have a small, but important role in population reproduction, by increasing the number of breeders

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Summary

Introduction

Competition for mates and territories among males results in some individuals remaining unpaired and without a territory, despite being physically capable of breeding (Smith and Arcese 1989). These individuals are usually defined as ‘floaters’. Changes in the age composition of breeders due to younger floating individuals entering the breeding population may highlight high levels of adult breeder mortality (Franklin 1992; Penteriani et al 2011). Floaters can gain fertilizations through extra-pair copulations (EPC) and contribute

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