4.5 Article

Breeding success but not mate choice is phenotype- and context-dependent in a color polymorphic raptor

Journal

BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY
Volume 30, Issue 3, Pages 763-769

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/beheco/arz013

Keywords

breeding output; color polymorphism; Eleonora's falcon; inbreeding; mate choice; natal dispersal

Funding

  1. Cabildo Insular de Lanzarote
  2. Marie Sklodowska-Curie Fellowship of the European Commission [747729]
  3. Marie Curie Actions (MSCA) [747729] Funding Source: Marie Curie Actions (MSCA)

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Morph-specific mate choice has been proposed as one of the evolutionary mechanisms that contribute to the maintenance of variation in color polymorphic systems. Coloration usually covaries with other phenotypic traits affecting life history and thus is often used as a criterion for mate choice. Here, we assess whether mating patterns, natal dispersal, and breeding output are phenotype-dependent in the color polymorphic Eleonora's falcon. We used a long-term dataset of 946 individually ringed adult falcons that included 109 individuals monitored from birth up to recruitment into the breeding population. Overall, patterns of mate choice with regard to coloration were neither assortative nor disassortative. Natal dispersal distance was greater in females but was not associated with coloration. Breeding success was both morph-dependent and context-dependent. Although clutch size was similar in differently colored pairs, differences arose in the number of chicks that fledge. In some years, dark males raised more offspring, regardless of female color morph. Differences in the breeding tactics between male morphs could be associated with intraspecific predation and may thus contribute to the observed differences in breeding output, especially when food availability is low. This suggests that mating patterns may interact with other factors and give rise to the observed higher breeding output of dark males only under certain environmental conditions. In color polymorphic species, individuals can prefer mates of the same or different color, change preference according to socio-environmental conditions, or even show no preference. Coloration can advertise many individual qualities, including kinship. Eleonora's falcons morphs do not mate assortatively or disassortatively, although two incestuous pairs were of the same dark-morph. Dark males raised more offspring than pale ones, but not all years, suggesting that mating interactions in turn interact with environmental factors.

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