Dr. Matt Reudink

Professor



Faculty of Science

Thompson Rivers University


Extra-pair paternity drives plumage colour elaboration in male passerines


Journal article


E. Thibault, S. M. Mahoney, J. Briskie, M. Shaikh, M. Reudink
PLoS ONE, 2022

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMedCentral PubMed
Cite

Cite

APA   Click to copy
Thibault, E., Mahoney, S. M., Briskie, J., Shaikh, M., & Reudink, M. (2022). Extra-pair paternity drives plumage colour elaboration in male passerines. PLoS ONE.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Thibault, E., S. M. Mahoney, J. Briskie, M. Shaikh, and M. Reudink. “Extra-Pair Paternity Drives Plumage Colour Elaboration in Male Passerines.” PLoS ONE (2022).


MLA   Click to copy
Thibault, E., et al. “Extra-Pair Paternity Drives Plumage Colour Elaboration in Male Passerines.” PLoS ONE, 2022.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{e2022a,
  title = {Extra-pair paternity drives plumage colour elaboration in male passerines},
  year = {2022},
  journal = {PLoS ONE},
  author = {Thibault, E. and Mahoney, S. M. and Briskie, J. and Shaikh, M. and Reudink, M.}
}

Abstract

The elaborate ornamental plumage displayed by birds has largely been attributed to sexual selection, whereby the greater success of ornamented males in attaining mates drives a rapid elaboration of those ornaments. Indeed, plumage elaboration tends to be greatest in species with a high variance in reproductive success such as polygynous mating systems. Even among socially monogamous species, many males are extremely colourful. In their now-classic study, Møller and Birkhead (1994) suggested that increased variance in reproductive success afforded by extra-pair paternity should intensify sexual selection pressure and thus an elaboration of male plumage and sexual dichromatism, but the relatively few measures of extra-pair paternity at the time prevented a rigorous test of this hypothesis. In the nearly three decades since that paper’s publication, hundreds of studies have been published on rates of extra-pair paternity and more objective measures of plumage colouration have been developed, allowing for a large-scale comparative test of Møller and Birkhead’s (1994) hypothesis. Using an analysis of 186 socially monogamous passerine species with estimates of extra-pair paternity, our phylogenetically controlled analysis confirms Møller and Birkhead’s (1994) early work, demonstrating that rates of extra-pair paternity are positively associated with male, but not female, colouration and with the extent of sexual dichromatism. Plumage evolution is complex and multifaceted, driven by phylogenetic, ecological, and social factors, but our analysis confirms a key role of extra-pair mate choice in driving the evolution of ornamental traits.





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