Journal article

Nutritional bias as a new mode of adjusting sex allocation

MJL Magrath, E Van Lieshout, GH Visser, J Komdeur

Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences | ROYAL SOC | Published : 2004

Abstract

Sex biases in the allocation of resources to offspring occur in a broad range of taxa. Parents have been shown to achieve such biases either by producing numerically more of one sex or by providing the individuals of one sex with a greater quantity of resources. In addition, skews in allocation could occur if the offspring of one sex receive resources of higher quality (greater nutritional or energetic value by weight or volume), although this mode of adjustment has, to our knowledge, never been demonstrated. We compared the types of prey and the metabolizable energy provisioned to male and female nestlings in one of the most sexually size dimorphic of all birds, the brown songlark, Cinclorh..

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University of Melbourne Researchers