According to the brood reduction hypothesis, parents adjust their brood size in response to current environmental conditions. When resources are abundant, parents can successfully raise all hatched offspring, but when resources are scarce, brood reduction, i.e., the sacrifice of some siblings to secure the quality of a subset of offspring, may maximize fitness. Differential transfer of maternal androgens is one potential proximate mechanism through which female birds may facilitate brood reduction because it may alter the relative competitive ability of sibling nestlings. We tested the hypothesis that female collared flycatchers (Ficedula albicollis) manipulate sibling competition by transferring less androgens to eggs late in the laying se...
In many species, embryos are exposed to maternal hormones in utero, in the egg, or in the seed. In b...
Across animal taxa, reproductive success is generally more variable and more strongly dependent upon...
Animals and plants routinely produce more offspring than they can afford to rear. Mothers can favour...
Maternal hormones can have substantial phenotypic effects in the progeny of many vertebrates. It has...
Female birds might be able to manipulate the parental effort of their male partner through elevated ...
Mates and females are in conflict over parental care, as it would be favourable for one parent to sh...
Mothers may affect the future success of their offspring by varying allocation to eggs and embryos. ...
The differential allocation hypothesis predicts that females invest more resources into reproduction...
Avian mothers convey significant quantities of androgens (i.e. ?male? steroids) to their eggs, which...
Boncoraglio G, Groothuis TGG, von Engelhardt N. Differential Maternal Testosterone Allocation among ...
Parents are selected to preferentially invest in the offspring with highest reproductive value. One ...
Yolk androgen deposition is a widely investigated maternal effect in birds, but its adaptive value i...
The field of androgen deposition in avian eggs and its consequences for offspring development has re...
In many species, embryos are exposed to maternal hormones in utero, in the egg, or in the seed. In b...
Parents are selected to preferentially invest in the offspring with highest reproductive value. One ...
In many species, embryos are exposed to maternal hormones in utero, in the egg, or in the seed. In b...
Across animal taxa, reproductive success is generally more variable and more strongly dependent upon...
Animals and plants routinely produce more offspring than they can afford to rear. Mothers can favour...
Maternal hormones can have substantial phenotypic effects in the progeny of many vertebrates. It has...
Female birds might be able to manipulate the parental effort of their male partner through elevated ...
Mates and females are in conflict over parental care, as it would be favourable for one parent to sh...
Mothers may affect the future success of their offspring by varying allocation to eggs and embryos. ...
The differential allocation hypothesis predicts that females invest more resources into reproduction...
Avian mothers convey significant quantities of androgens (i.e. ?male? steroids) to their eggs, which...
Boncoraglio G, Groothuis TGG, von Engelhardt N. Differential Maternal Testosterone Allocation among ...
Parents are selected to preferentially invest in the offspring with highest reproductive value. One ...
Yolk androgen deposition is a widely investigated maternal effect in birds, but its adaptive value i...
The field of androgen deposition in avian eggs and its consequences for offspring development has re...
In many species, embryos are exposed to maternal hormones in utero, in the egg, or in the seed. In b...
Parents are selected to preferentially invest in the offspring with highest reproductive value. One ...
In many species, embryos are exposed to maternal hormones in utero, in the egg, or in the seed. In b...
Across animal taxa, reproductive success is generally more variable and more strongly dependent upon...
Animals and plants routinely produce more offspring than they can afford to rear. Mothers can favour...