Animals (Nov 2023)

Breeding Behavior, Nestling Growth, and Begging Behavior in the Plain Laughingthrush (<i>Garrulax davidi</i>): Implications for Parent–Offspring Conflict

  • Jinyuan Zeng,
  • Yueqi Li,
  • Long Zhao,
  • Yurou Shi,
  • Saba Gul,
  • Hongquan Shi,
  • Sen Song

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ani13223522
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 22
p. 3522

Abstract

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Investigation on food allocation among nestlings of altricial birds is crucial in understanding parent–offspring conflicts within avian families. However, there is no consensus in empirical studies regarding whether parents or offspring determine the food allocation pattern within a brood. In the Plain Laughingthrush (Garrulax davidi), we examine the relationship between parental feeding strategies and nestling begging behaviors. Due to hatching asynchrony, larger nestlings have a competitive advantage in food acquisition over their smaller brood-mates; nevertheless, if the initial food-receivers were already satiated and did not immediately consume the food, parents would retrieve the food and re-allocate it to another nestling. This re-feeding tactic employed by parents reduced the likelihood of early-hatched nestlings monopolizing the food solely due to their larger body size. Our findings indicate that parents primarily allocated food based on nestling begging intensity, while their re-feeding tactic is determined by whether the first food-receivers have consumed the food. To date, our research demonstrates that while parental food allocation primarily hinges on the begging intensity of the nestlings, the decision to re-feed is contingent upon whether the initial recipients of the food ingest it immediately.

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