Abstract

This paper reports on an experiment designed to investigate whether guarding females of the cichlid Aequidens coeruleopunctatus adjust their parental behaviour in response to changes in brood size. It was found that females were easier to scare away from their broods when threatened, and stayed away for longer, after some of their fry had been removed, and that the reverse occurred when broods were experimentally augmented with foreign fry. Brood size manipulations change the expected benefits of future investment. These results therefore indicate that parental care strategies in A. coeruleopunctatus reflect future prospects for reproductive success rather than past investment.

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