Abstract

Parental care is among the most widespread and variable behavioural traits between and within species, associated often both with large fitness costs and benefits. Despite its fitness consequences and evolutionary significance, we know very little about the ontogeny of this behaviour, specifically, whether and how social experiences from parents contribute to the development of parental care. Here we used a split-family experimental design to produce uniparentally raised zebra finch nestlings that were provisioned either only by their mother or their father from shortly after hatching until independence. We investigated whether zebra finch nestlings pay attention to who takes care of them (short-term social effects) and whether parental sex roles, i.e. how much each parent provides to offspring, are socially learned and how these early social experiences influence negotiation rules of parental effort as adults (long-term social effects). We found pronounced short-term effects: uniparentally raised young socialized more with their ’caring‘ than with their ’non-caring‘ parent in a two-way choice test and begged more for food from them. When paired as adults based on their caring parent, some combinations of these uniparentally raised finches did not coordinate normally during incubation as first-time parents. By nestling provisioning (and their second breeding) even these pairs assumed normal distribution of parental effort and we therefore conclude that early social experiences influence parental sex roles and coordination, but these can be overridden by own social experiences with the mate when starting to breed.

Highlights

  • Parental care is among the most beneficial, and, at the same time, among the costliest traits that influence fitness

  • Negotiation models imply that parents, by paying close attention to each other, indicate their condition, workload and how they perceive the need of the offspring or the food sources to each other, this social information can help pairs to adjust their parental effort in a coordinated manner (Johnstone and Hinde, 2006)

  • Using a split-family experimental design, we investigated in the biparental zebra finch whether early social experiences with each parent would influence offspring behavior toward each parent and, later in life, their own adult parental sex role and negotiation with their pairs

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Summary

Introduction

Parental care is among the most beneficial, and, at the same time, among the costliest traits that influence fitness. If parents dynamically adjust their parental effort as a response to that of their mate, the resolution is reached behaviourally on a realtime scale (“negotiation” models; McNamara et al, 1999, 2003; Johnstone and Hinde, 2006; Lessells and McNamara, 2012). Negotiation models imply that parents, by paying close attention to each other, indicate their condition, workload and how they perceive the need of the offspring or the food sources to each other, this social information can help pairs to adjust their parental effort in a coordinated manner (Johnstone and Hinde, 2006)

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