Scientific Reports (Jul 2017)

Decreasing parental task specialization promotes conditional cooperation

  • Arne Iserbyt,
  • Nolwenn Fresneau,
  • Tiffanie Kortenhoff,
  • Marcel Eens,
  • Wendt Müller

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-06667-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract How much to invest in parental care and by who remain puzzling questions fomented by a sexual conflict between parents. Negotiation that facilitates coordinated parental behaviour may be key to ease this costly conflict. However, understanding cooperation requires that the temporal and sex-specific variation in parental care, as well as its multivariate nature is considered. Using a biparental bird species and repeated sampling of behavioural activities throughout a major part of reproduction, we show a clear division of tasks between males and females in provisioning, brooding and foraging. Such behavioural specializations fade with increasing nestling age, which stimulates the degree of alternated feeding visits, as a recently promoted form of conditional cooperation. However, such cooperation is thought to benefit offspring development, which is not supported by our data. Thus, from a proximate point of view, conditional cooperation via alternation critically depends on the division of parental tasks, while the ultimate benefits have yet to be shown.