In addition to food and protection, altricial young in many species are ectothermic and require that endothermic parents provide warmth to foster growth, yet only one parent—typically the female—broods these young to keep them warm. When this occurs, reduced provisioning by males obliges females to forage instead of providing warmth for offspring, favoring the temporal mapping of male activities. We assessed this in a wild house wren population while experimentally feeding nestlings to control offspring satiety. While brooding, females look out from the nest to inspect their surroundings, and we hypothesized that this helps to determine if their mate is nearby and likely to deliver food to the brood (males pass food to brooding females, whi...
Males are generally predicted to care less for their young when they have more additional mating opp...
Risk-taking behaviour of short lived nesting birds is often explained in relation to the reproductiv...
Predation is a significant cause of nest failure in passerine birds, and thus, natural selection is ...
In addition to food and protection, altricial young in many species are ectothermic and require that...
Descriptive studies of provisioning in cooperatively breeding superb fairy-wrens, Malurus cyaneus, s...
In altricial birds, parental provisioning is plastic and can respond to a variety of environmental s...
In biparental species, conflict between the sexes is expected when optimal levels of parental care d...
Sex allocation theory assumes individual plasticity in maternal strategies, but few studies have inv...
Males in the cavity-nesting house wren (Troglodytes aedon) frequently add arthropod cocoons to their...
Sex allocation theory assumes individual plasticity in maternal strategies, but few studies have inv...
International audienceParental care is a key factor of breeding success and parents face evolutionar...
Nest size has been suggested to be a sexually selected signal, allowing individuals to obtain reliab...
Brooding of nestlings in cooperatively breeding bird species may be disrupted by the attendance of h...
Male wrens (Troglodytes troglodytes) construct nests that are used in their display to females. Prev...
When faced with a predator near the nest, breeding birds faced a dilemma: to continue providing pare...
Males are generally predicted to care less for their young when they have more additional mating opp...
Risk-taking behaviour of short lived nesting birds is often explained in relation to the reproductiv...
Predation is a significant cause of nest failure in passerine birds, and thus, natural selection is ...
In addition to food and protection, altricial young in many species are ectothermic and require that...
Descriptive studies of provisioning in cooperatively breeding superb fairy-wrens, Malurus cyaneus, s...
In altricial birds, parental provisioning is plastic and can respond to a variety of environmental s...
In biparental species, conflict between the sexes is expected when optimal levels of parental care d...
Sex allocation theory assumes individual plasticity in maternal strategies, but few studies have inv...
Males in the cavity-nesting house wren (Troglodytes aedon) frequently add arthropod cocoons to their...
Sex allocation theory assumes individual plasticity in maternal strategies, but few studies have inv...
International audienceParental care is a key factor of breeding success and parents face evolutionar...
Nest size has been suggested to be a sexually selected signal, allowing individuals to obtain reliab...
Brooding of nestlings in cooperatively breeding bird species may be disrupted by the attendance of h...
Male wrens (Troglodytes troglodytes) construct nests that are used in their display to females. Prev...
When faced with a predator near the nest, breeding birds faced a dilemma: to continue providing pare...
Males are generally predicted to care less for their young when they have more additional mating opp...
Risk-taking behaviour of short lived nesting birds is often explained in relation to the reproductiv...
Predation is a significant cause of nest failure in passerine birds, and thus, natural selection is ...