If environmental or maternal factors favor the fitness of one sex over the other, theory predicts that mothers should produce more offspring of the sex most likely to benefit from prevailing conditions. For species where males depend on carotenoid-based colorful ornaments to secure territory or attract mates, carotenoid availability in the environment could be one such component: mothers experiencing high availability of carotenoids should produce more sons. Here, we test this hypothesis by providing carotenoids to a wild population of a sexually dimorphic passerine, the hihi (stitch bird: Notiomystis cincta). Access to carotenoids during early life influences the color of male hihi plumage, which improves territory acquisition as adults. T...
Carotenoids are critical to embryonic development, immunity and protection from oxidative stress. Tr...
1. Carotenoids transferred from mother to offspring may enhance the quality of the offspring. Whethe...
Theory predicts that mothers should adjust offspring sex ratios when the expected fitness gains or r...
If environmental or maternal factors favour the fitness of one sex over the other, theory predicts t...
BACKGROUND:Animals use carotenoid-pigments for coloration, as antioxidants and as enhancers of the i...
Reproduction is known to increase the basal metabolic rate and generate oxidative stress, a possible...
Mothers can strongly influence the development of their offspring, and if maternal resources are lim...
Bright yellow to red signals used in mate choice or intrasexual competition are based on carotenoid ...
Carotenoid-based ornaments (many yellow-orange-red colourations) may signal the genetic or parental ...
Carotenoids are integument pigments that often reflect foraging efficiency, disease resistance and b...
Carotenoids are antioxidants playing major roles in physiological functions at various stages of an ...
Egg quality may mediate maternal allocation strategies according to progeny sex. In vertebrates, car...
Carotenoid pigments have attracted much interest in behavioural and evolutionary ecology because of ...
Carotenoids can confer somatic and reproductive benefits, but most evidence is from captive animal e...
Despite convincing evidence that carotenoid availability can have positive physiological effects, we...
Carotenoids are critical to embryonic development, immunity and protection from oxidative stress. Tr...
1. Carotenoids transferred from mother to offspring may enhance the quality of the offspring. Whethe...
Theory predicts that mothers should adjust offspring sex ratios when the expected fitness gains or r...
If environmental or maternal factors favour the fitness of one sex over the other, theory predicts t...
BACKGROUND:Animals use carotenoid-pigments for coloration, as antioxidants and as enhancers of the i...
Reproduction is known to increase the basal metabolic rate and generate oxidative stress, a possible...
Mothers can strongly influence the development of their offspring, and if maternal resources are lim...
Bright yellow to red signals used in mate choice or intrasexual competition are based on carotenoid ...
Carotenoid-based ornaments (many yellow-orange-red colourations) may signal the genetic or parental ...
Carotenoids are integument pigments that often reflect foraging efficiency, disease resistance and b...
Carotenoids are antioxidants playing major roles in physiological functions at various stages of an ...
Egg quality may mediate maternal allocation strategies according to progeny sex. In vertebrates, car...
Carotenoid pigments have attracted much interest in behavioural and evolutionary ecology because of ...
Carotenoids can confer somatic and reproductive benefits, but most evidence is from captive animal e...
Despite convincing evidence that carotenoid availability can have positive physiological effects, we...
Carotenoids are critical to embryonic development, immunity and protection from oxidative stress. Tr...
1. Carotenoids transferred from mother to offspring may enhance the quality of the offspring. Whethe...
Theory predicts that mothers should adjust offspring sex ratios when the expected fitness gains or r...