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Male and Female Parent Birds Enhance Their Reproductive Success Using Different Strategies but the Same Optimal Pathway.

Created on 13 Sep 2025

Authors

Ning-Ning Sun, Bi-Yun Jia, Rong-Yu Xu, Li-Fang Gao, Xue-Fei Guo, Rang Li, Yu-Jie Wang, Shu-Min Wang, Bo Du

Published in

Molecular ecology. Pages e70111. Sep 12, 2025. Epub Sep 12, 2025.

Abstract

Parental birds exhibit diverse alternative reproductive strategies; however, the pathways by which these alternative strategies enhance the reproductive success of parents remain poorly understood. Here, we used generalised linear mixed models (GLMMs) and structural equation modelling (SEM) to analyse a long-term dataset of multiple components of reproductive fitness in the azure-winged magpie (Cyanopica cyanus ), including incipient offspring number, extra-pair fertilisation (EPF), unhatched eggs, offspring preyed on by predators and conspecific raiders and offspring that starved. GLMM results revealed significant associations between these components and the first lay date. SEM further elucidated causal relationships among female/male breeding conditions, cooperative breeding, first lay date and the positive/negative effects on female/male reproductive success. SEM results revealed that both female and male reproductive success were mainly influenced by negative effects rather than positive effects. Specifically, negative effects were largely determined by unhatched eggs for females but by female EPF frequency for males. In contrast, positive effects were predominantly determined by the incipient offspring number for both sexes. Therefore, minimising negative effects was prioritised over enhancing positive effects to achieve reproductive success in both sexes. To modulate these effects, females and males employed different strategies. However, they achieved their respective goals through a shared pathway: reducing negative effects for social bonds formed with smaller-bodied males and enhancing positive effects for social bonds formed with larger-bodied males. Our multivariate analysis of various aspects of avian reproduction suggests that the formation of social bonds plays a more important role than alternative reproductive strategies in determining individual reproductive success.

PMID:
40944353
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 13 Sep 2025.

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