Abstract

A silver spoon effect means that individuals who develop under favourable circumstances enjoy a fitness or performance advantage later in life. While there is large empirical support for silver spoon effects acting on different life-history traits in birds, such as survival and reproduction, the evidence for the carry-over effects of rearing conditions on the quality of future plumage generations is lacking. Here, we examined whether abilities of individuals to undergo extensive post-juvenile moult may depend on the quality of juvenile plumage developed during the nestling phase in a small passerine showing large individual variation in the extent of post-juvenile moult, the greenfinch (Carduelis chloris). We found that high structural quality and carotenoid chroma of juvenile feathers were positively linked to the extent of post-juvenile moult in this species, thus allowing young birds to attain more adult-like plumage. Silver spoon effects mediated by the juvenile plumage quality were also found to have other fitness-related consequences, as individuals with high-quality juvenile feathers were in better condition during their first winter. As far as we are aware, the results provide the first correlative evidence for a silver spoon effect acting on general plumage quality in birds.

Highlights

  • Moulting is an important, but energetically demanding stage of the avian annual cycle

  • The first moult after fledging usually allows transition from a distinct juvenile plumage developed in the nestling phase into the adult-like

  • After accounting for the effect of sex, we found that there was a significant positive relationship between the quality of juvenile rectrices and the extent of post-juvenile moult (F1,504 = 7.69, p = 0.006; β = 0.26 ± 0.09; figure 1a), the quality of juvenile feathers explained only 1.5% of the variance in moult extent

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Summary

Introduction

But energetically demanding stage of the avian annual cycle. The first moult after fledging (postjuvenile moult) usually allows transition from a distinct juvenile plumage developed in the nestling phase into the adult-like. While the extent of post-juvenile moult is strictly specified and invariable in many 2 avian species, a number of passerines show great individual variation in this trait [1]; this phenomenon has been largely neglected in the studies on the ecological causes and consequences of seasonal moulting

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