Abstract

In animals with uniparental care, the quality of care provided by one sex can deeply impact the reproductive success of both sexes. Studying variation in parental care quality within a species and which factors may affect it can, therefore, shed important light on patterns of mate choice and other reproductive decisions observed in nature. Using Syngnathus typhle, a pipefish species with extensive uniparental male care, with embryos developing inside a brood pouch during a lengthy pregnancy, we assessed how egg size (which correlates positively with female size), male size, and water temperature affect brooding traits that relate to male care quality, all measured on day 18, approximately 1/3, of the brooding period. We found that larger males brooded eggs at lower densities, and their embryos were heavier than those of small males independent of initial egg size. However, large males had lower embryo survival relative to small males. We found no effect of egg size or of paternal size on within-pouch oxygen levels, but oxygen levels were significantly higher in the bottom than the middle section of the pouch. Males that brooded at higher temperatures had lower pouch oxygen levels presumably because of higher embryo developmental rates, as more developed embryos consume more oxygen. Together, our results suggest that small and large males follow distinct paternal strategies: large males positively affect embryo size whereas small males favor embryo survival. As females prefer large mates, offspring size at independence may be more important to female fitness than offspring survival during development.

Highlights

  • Parental care is a phylogenetically widespread evolutionary strategy that can be performed by females, males or both parents (CluttonBrock 1991)

  • Large males received significantly more eggs than smaller males did (Figure 1), whereas egg size class had no effect on egg numbers and there was no interaction between male size class and egg size class (Table 3)

  • Small males experienced significantly higher relative embryo survival, whereas again, egg size class had no impact and there was no interaction between the factors (Table 3)

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Summary

Introduction

Parental care is a phylogenetically widespread evolutionary strategy that can be performed by females, males or both parents (CluttonBrock 1991). Parental care increases the reproductive success of parents by improving the survival and/or quality of the offspring they care for (Clutton-Brock 1991; Kvarnemo 2010; Royle et al 2012). Offspring care is often associated with costs to the parent providing it, such as increased energy expenditure, sometimes exacerbated by reduced feeding opportunities (DeMartini 1987), which together reduce the carer’s residual reproductive value. This significant cost results in selection to optimize. The study of causes and consequences of variation in parental care quality can shed important light into patterns of mate choice and other reproductive decisions observed in nature, and it has for decades attracted the interest of behavioral ecologists and evolutionary biologists (Williams 1966; Trivers 1972; Clutton-Brock 1991; Royle et al 2012)

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