Abstract
Electrophoretic analysis was performed on 28 families of eastern kingbirds (Tyrannus tyrannus) from northern Michigan to estimate the occurrence of multiple parentage. Out of 19 families used in the final analysis, at least one putative parent was excluded in 9 families, or 18 out of 60 offspring (30% of offspring). Distribution of exclusion types conforms most closely to a model of quasi-parasitism, rather than extra-pair fertilizations, with secondary females laying their eggs in the primary female's nest, but “random” brood parasitism cannot be ruled out as an additional or alternative source of stray genes. Based on the model of random parasitism, an estimated 39% of all offspring in this population may be unrelated to one or both of the putative parents, or 53% based on a model of quasi-parasitism. Heretofore, eastern kingbirds have been considered to be exclusively monogamous; no behavioral evidence for alternative reproductive strategies has ever been reported for this species.
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