Abstract

Extra-pair paternity is the result of copulation between a female and a male other than her social partner. In socially monogamous birds, old males are most likely to sire extra-pair offspring. The male manipulation and female choice hypotheses predict that age-specific male mating behaviour could explain this old-over-young male advantage. These hypotheses have been difficult to test because copulations and the individuals involved are hard to observe. Here, we studied the mating behaviour and pairing contexts of captive house sparrows, Passer domesticus. Our set-up mimicked the complex social environment experienced by wild house sparrows. We found that middle-aged males, which would be considered old in natural populations, gained most extra-pair paternity. However, both, female solicitation behaviour and subsequent extra-pair matings were not associated with male age. Further, copulations were more likely when solicited by females than when initiated by males (i.e. unsolicited copulations). Male initiated within-pair copulations were more common than male initiated extra-pair copulations. To conclude, our results did not support either hypothesis regarding age-specific male mating behaviour. Instead, female choice, independent of male age, governed copulation success, especially in an extra-pair context. Post-copulatory mechanisms might determine why older males sire more extra-pair offspring.

Highlights

  • A robust finding in studies of avian extra-pair paternity is that older males sire more extra-pair offspring than younger males

  • We find that middle-aged males, old birds in the wild[23], produced most extra-pair offspring, which mirrors the results in a wild house sparrow population where extra-pair paternity increased with age in males before showing a decline[12]

  • We did not find an association between extra- over within-pair mating and male age or female choice and male age

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Summary

Introduction

A robust finding in studies of avian extra-pair paternity is that older males sire more extra-pair offspring than younger males (see meta-analyses in[1,2]). It has been suggested that older males might outcompete younger males for extra-pair mating opportunities[7,8] or that females may prefer older males as extra-pair partners[9,10]. We test whether older males achieve more extra-pair copulations and paternity, and whether female solicitation is associated with extra-pair mating. Older males are predicted to obtain more extra-pair copulations than younger males. This was coined the male manipulation hypothesis[12].

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