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Female birds can’t shake their colorful fathers, and other lessons from studying 6,000 species

Date:
November 4, 2015
Source:
McMaster University
Summary:
The evolution of male songbirds as the colorful consorts of drab female partners is more complicated than long thought, says a researcher on a team that looked at nearly 6,000 species for a massive study.
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The evolution of male songbirds as the colorful consorts of drab female partners is more complicated than long thought, says a McMaster researcher on a team that looked at nearly 6,000 species for a massive study published in the journal Nature.

Conventional wisdom has held that in many species, male birds were more colorful because they were competing for female attention, and that female birds were less colorful because they needed camouflage while guarding their nests.

Now advances in computing power and new methods that compare coloration in different species have allowed the researchers on the study to look at every species of passerine, the perching songbirds that make up about 60 per cent of the world's 10,000 species of birds.

The study offers impressive new evidence that supports some old theories while setting others to rest, explains Cody Dey, an author of the Nature paper who was completing his PhD in Biology at McMaster at the time of the research.

The question of plumage colour is significant, Dey, explains, because birds, especially males, give up so much to look so good, creating an evolutionary mystery that asks exactly what they gain in return for rendering themselves more vulnerable to predation. "These are the questions that have been asked since the start of ecology," he says.

Among the ideas the research supports is that females would have evolved to be even more different than males than they already are, except that every female inherits the genetic material of a colorful male -- an ancestry that is impossible to shake. "If colorful males do better, they're going to produce colorful daughters as well, even though it's not necessarily advantageous for the daughters," Dey says.

At the same, time, the broad study of plumage patterns also suggests that female songbirds have evolved their own coloration to gain advantages in their particular climates and surroundings, adding weight to the idea that females are just as important in shaping the colors of their species as males.

The study takes a wide view of the world's songbirds, putting empirical evidence behind the observation that tropical birds are more colorful than their cousins from temperate climates, probably because they do not migrate.

Tropical birds have the luxury of permanent homes and longer lives and raising fewer offspring, but they pay for it by having to defend permanent territories, and their bright feathers may help them assert control over their home turf.

In non-tropical migratory species, mating relationships are typically limited to one season, diminishing the need for color, and allowing physiological resources to be used for other efficiencies.


Story Source:

Materials provided by McMaster University. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. James Dale, Cody J. Dey, Kaspar Delhey, Bart Kempenaers, Mihai Valcu. The effects of life history and sexual selection on male and female plumage colouration. Nature, 2015; DOI: 10.1038/nature15509

Cite This Page:

McMaster University. "Female birds can’t shake their colorful fathers, and other lessons from studying 6,000 species." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 4 November 2015. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/11/151104134033.htm>.
McMaster University. (2015, November 4). Female birds can’t shake their colorful fathers, and other lessons from studying 6,000 species. ScienceDaily. Retrieved March 28, 2024 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/11/151104134033.htm
McMaster University. "Female birds can’t shake their colorful fathers, and other lessons from studying 6,000 species." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/11/151104134033.htm (accessed March 28, 2024).

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