Abstract
We analyzed the variation in the secondary sex ratio of Magellanic Penguin Spheniscus magellanicus breeding in six colonies on the Patagonian coast of Argentina. We tested the effects of laying date and hatching sequence on the probability of producing sons and daughters. The global secondary sex ratio did not differ from equality, and there were no differences among the colonies. However, regardless of the colony, laying date, and hatching sequence, there was a significant effect on the proportion of males and females reared. Pairs that were laid early in the breeding season were more likely to raise a male. In addition, offspring that hatched first were more likely to be male than those that hatched second. Our results are consistent with the adaptive importance of producing males, likely the costliest sex, early in the breeding season or early in the brood when food resources are still abundant.
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