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Research Article

Extreme offspring ornamentation in American coots is favored by selection within families, not benefits to conspecific brood parasites

View ORCID ProfileBruce E. Lyon and View ORCID ProfileDaizaburo Shizuka
PNAS January 28, 2020 117 (4) 2056-2064; first published December 30, 2019; https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1913615117
Bruce E. Lyon
aDepartment of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Santa Cruz, CA 95060;
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  • ORCID record for Bruce E. Lyon
  • For correspondence: belyon@ucsc.edu
Daizaburo Shizuka
bSchool of Biological Sciences, University of Nebraska–Lincoln, Lincoln, NE 68588
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  1. Edited by Mary Jane West-Eberhard, Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Ciudad Universitaria, Costa Rica, and approved November 27, 2019 (received for review August 7, 2019)

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Significance

Bright colors in animals are often used for courtship, but some animals are born with such ornaments, posing an evolutionary puzzle: What are juvenile ornaments for? We studied variation in color of bright juvenile ornaments of American coot chicks (orange/red feathers, beak, and head) to ask why they might have evolved. Coots lay eggs in each other’s nests, but brood parasitic chicks were less colorful than host chicks, suggesting ornaments are not used to dupe hosts into feeding them more. Instead, chicks from later eggs were redder, and redder chicks were more likely to be chosen as the favored chicks that parents pamper. Chick coloration allows parents to invest in the chicks that most benefit from parental food.

Abstract

Offspring ornamentation typically occurs in taxa with parental care, suggesting that selection arising from social interactions between parents and offspring may underlie signal evolution. American coot babies are among the most ornamented offspring found in nature, sporting vividly orange-red natal plumage, a bright red beak, and other red parts around the face and pate. Previous plumage manipulation experiments showed that ornamented plumage is favored by strong parental choice for chicks with more extreme ornamentation but left unresolved the question as to why parents show the preference. Here we explore natural patterns of variation in coot chick plumage color, both within and between families, to understand the context of parental preference and to determine whose fitness interests are served by the ornamentation. Conspecific brood parasitism is common in coots and brood parasitic chicks could manipulate hosts by tapping into parental choice for ornamented chicks. However, counter to expectation, parasitic chicks were duller (less red) than nonparasitic chicks. This pattern is explained by color variation within families: Chick coloration increases with position in the egg-laying order, but parasitic eggs are usually the first eggs a female lays. Maternal effects influence chick coloration, but coot females do not use this mechanism to benefit the chicks they lay as parasites. However, within families, chick coloration predicts whether chicks become “favorites” when parents begin control over food distribution, implicating a role for the chick ornamentation in the parental life-history strategy, perhaps as a reliable signal of a chick’s size or age.

  • conspecific brood parasitism
  • offspring ornamentation
  • American coot
  • social selection
  • parental choice

Footnotes

  • ↵1To whom correspondence may be addressed. Email: belyon{at}ucsc.edu.
  • Author contributions: B.E.L. and D.S. designed research; B.E.L. and D.S. performed research; D.S. analyzed data; and B.E.L. and D.S. wrote the paper.

  • The authors declare no competing interest.

  • This article is a PNAS Direct Submission.

  • Data deposition: Data reported in this paper have been deposited in Dryad Digital Repository (accession no. DOI: 10.5061/dryad.ns1rn8pnv).

  • See online for related content such as Commentaries.

  • This article contains supporting information online at https://www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1073/pnas.1913615117/-/DCSupplemental.

Published under the PNAS license.

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Extreme offspring ornamentation in American coots is favored by selection within families, not benefits to conspecific brood parasites
Bruce E. Lyon, Daizaburo Shizuka
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Jan 2020, 117 (4) 2056-2064; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1913615117

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Extreme offspring ornamentation in American coots is favored by selection within families, not benefits to conspecific brood parasites
Bruce E. Lyon, Daizaburo Shizuka
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Jan 2020, 117 (4) 2056-2064; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1913615117
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