Diverse patterns of parental care, including uniparental care by either the male or the female, provide excellent opportunities to investigate how variation in social traits is maintained in wild populations. Coexistence of different parental strategies within the same population is expected when they exhibit similar cost-benefit ratios. We investigated one of the most diverse avian breeding systems and compared parental behavior and reproductive output between nests that are uniparentally cared for by male or female Eurasian Penduline Tits (Remiz pendulinus). In this small passerine bird, full care (incubation and brood care) is provided by the male only (7-18% of nests) or the female only (48-65% of nests). Additionally, a third of all ne...
Engagement in extra-pair copulations is an example of the abundant conflicting interests between mal...
Parental care is costly, and in many organisms, the male or the female parent benefits from reducing...
Parental care is costly, and in many organisms, the male or the female parent benefits from reducing...
Diverse patterns of parental care, including uniparental care by either the male or the female, prov...
Parental care is costly since it takes time and energy, and whilst caring the parent may be predated...
Why do females increase parental effort when caring for the offspring of attractive males? First, at...
Do the two parents at a nest make simultaneous decisions whether to care for their offspring or to d...
Parents are expected to make fine-tuned decisions by weighing the benefits of providing care to incr...
Eurasian penduline tits (Remiz pendulinus) have an unusually diverse breeding system consisting of f...
A fundamental tenet of sexual conflict theory is that one sex may increase its reproductive success ...
Background: The trade-off between current and future parental investment is often different between ...
Although biparental care is the most commonly observed pattern in bird species, the evolutionary cau...
Abstract Background The trade-off between current and future parental investment is often different ...
Engagement in extra-pair copulations is an example of the abundant conflicting interests between mal...
Parental care is costly, and in many organisms, the male or the female parent benefits from reducing...
Parental care is costly, and in many organisms, the male or the female parent benefits from reducing...
Diverse patterns of parental care, including uniparental care by either the male or the female, prov...
Parental care is costly since it takes time and energy, and whilst caring the parent may be predated...
Why do females increase parental effort when caring for the offspring of attractive males? First, at...
Do the two parents at a nest make simultaneous decisions whether to care for their offspring or to d...
Parents are expected to make fine-tuned decisions by weighing the benefits of providing care to incr...
Eurasian penduline tits (Remiz pendulinus) have an unusually diverse breeding system consisting of f...
A fundamental tenet of sexual conflict theory is that one sex may increase its reproductive success ...
Background: The trade-off between current and future parental investment is often different between ...
Although biparental care is the most commonly observed pattern in bird species, the evolutionary cau...
Abstract Background The trade-off between current and future parental investment is often different ...
Engagement in extra-pair copulations is an example of the abundant conflicting interests between mal...
Parental care is costly, and in many organisms, the male or the female parent benefits from reducing...
Parental care is costly, and in many organisms, the male or the female parent benefits from reducing...