Females of many socially monogamous bird species engage in — or even actively seek — copulations outside their social pair bond. However, in socially monogamous birds with low breeding abundance, such as the Red-backed Shrike, extra-pair paternity (EPP) was thought to be an exceptional and random incident. Drawing on samples collected in an unusually dense Red-backed Shrike population in the Czech Republic, we show through DNA microsatellite typing that among 65 chicks from 15 nests, 10 individuals (26.5%) had been sired by males other than the nest-attending social mate. All 10 extra pair young were of male sex. In all cases, genetic fathers of extra pair young stemmed from neighbouring territories. Extra pair fathers had significantly longer tarsi than social mates, indicating that female choice was a function of age-class dependent male body size. Our findings support sex allocation theory, which suggests that promiscuous females mating with higher quality males should produce mostly sons.
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1 June 2008
Male-Biased Sex of Extra Pair Young in the Socially Monogamous Red-Backed Shrike Lanius collurio
Lucie Schwarzová,
Jaroslav Šimek,
Timothy Coppack,
Piotr Tryjanowski
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DNA microsatellite
extra pair paternity
Lanius collurio
Red-backed Shrike
secondary sexual character
sex ratio