Abstract

Males of many species can breed in distinct alternative phenotypes; for example, in many birds some males breed in dull plumage while others breed in bright plumage. Because females often appear to prefer brighter males, it is unclear why some males breed in dull plumage. Males in dull plumage might enjoy enhanced within-pair reproductive success if they can gain access to better breeding territories, or they might have relatively high extrapair reproductive success if they are better able to intrude on the territories of other males. To test these possibilities, we examined the reproductive consequences of plumage color in the red-backed fairy-wren (Malurus melanocephalus), a species in which males can breed in either bright plumage or dull plumage or serve as nonbreeding auxiliaries. Male plumage color was distributed bimodally and was loosely associated with age, such that some males molted into bright plumage a year or more earlier than others. Both male phenotypes were cuckolded at similar rates, but bright males sired significantly more extrapair young than did dull males, and this effect was independent of age. Thus, 1-year-old males who bred in dull plumage had low seasonal reproductive success compared with same-aged males who bred in bright plumage. These results suggest that males may not reap any fitness benefits by breeding in dull coloration, compared with breeding in bright plumage, but rather may be constrained to breed in suboptimal plumage by the timing of plumage acquisition.

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