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22 February 2017 Plumage pattern dimorphism in a shorebird exhibiting sex-role reversal ( Actitis macularius)
Misha Blizard, Stephen Pruett-Jones
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Abstract

In birds, both males and females can exhibit socially selected traits, but relatively few studies address the role of female ornaments despite their potential importance in competitive female–female interactions and male mate choice. We investigated the melanized plumage pattern of male and female Spotted Sandpipers (Actitis macularius), a species with sex-role reversal and a polyandrous mating system. While the sexes overlap in the spottiness metrics, females had fewer, but larger and more irregularly shaped spots that covered a greater percentage of their plumage than did males. Feather mite load best explained the first principal component of plumage pattern (i.e. spot size) in females as well as in males. Sandpipers with lower mite loads had larger spots, but this relationship was less strong in males. Considering the second principal component (i.e. spot shape and percent cover), mass, hematocrit levels, and day captured best explained variation across females. Heavier females with higher hematocrit levels were caught later in the season and had more irregular spots and a higher percentage of melanized plumage cover. Spot pattern in recaptured individuals changed with capture year, indicating that spottiness varies within an individual's life. Overall, these results show that although the differences between the sexes are subtle, spottiness in Spotted Sandpipers is a measurably sexually dimorphic trait with females as the more ornamented sex, and that melanized ornaments can be indicators of female, and possibly male, condition.

© 2017 American Ornithological Society.
Misha Blizard and Stephen Pruett-Jones "Plumage pattern dimorphism in a shorebird exhibiting sex-role reversal ( Actitis macularius)," The Auk 134(2), 363-376, (22 February 2017). https://doi.org/10.1642/AUK-16-96.1
Received: 17 May 2016; Accepted: 1 December 2016; Published: 22 February 2017
KEYWORDS
Actitis macularius
feather mites
melanin
plumage pattern
polyandry
sex-role reversal
sexual dimorphism
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