Abstract
Parental care is defined as any behavioral trait of the parents that improves the fitness of the offspring, and that probably evolved or is currently maintained by this function. There is variation in the type and amount of care allocated by parents depending on fluctuation in brood demands that respond to growth and developmental environment. Each sex, within the breeding pair, may respond differently to changing brood demands, and such variation might impact offspring development and fitness. Even though there is a plethora of studies evaluating sex differences in parental care, proximate factors influencing distribution of parental duties within the breeding pairs have received far less attention. In a wild population of Western Bluebirds, we assessed sex differences in parental care (i.e. brood attendance, food deliveries, nest cleaning) through nestling development, and evaluated whether distribution of parental care between sexes is associated with offspring growth. We found that females adjusted their parental behavior according to changes in brood demands more often than males, and fed, attended, and cleaned more than males. Moreover, a more female-biased distribution of care through nestling development was positively associated with the growth of fledglings. We conclude that sex differences in parental care may be a measure of specialization in parental duties within breeding pairs favored by natural selection. These findings are in marked contrast to earlier studies in Northern populations of Western Bluebirds that have failed to detect differences in parental care between sexes, and suggest that differences in the social environment or ecological conditions between populations of the same species might lead to differences in parental cooperation between males and females.
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