UH Mânoa researcher finds Laysan albatross employs 'dual mommies'
What's a girl to do if there's a shortage of males and she needs help raising a family? The Laysan albatross employs a strategy called reciprocity, where unrelated females pair together and take turns raising offspring. On the island of Oahu, in Hawaii, 31% of nests are female-female pairs. Female pairs raise fewer chicks than male-female pairs, but given the shortage of males, fewer chicks are better than none. Since albatross can only raise one chick each year, females stay together for multiple years for each to reproduce. This unusual strategy may explain why Laysan Albatross are successfully re-colonizing islands.
The findings by University of Hawai’i at Mânoa zoology doctoral candidate Lindsay Young, and her co-authors* are published today in the Royal Society journal Biology Letters in a paper entitled, “Successful same-sex pairing in Laysan albatross.”
Unrelated same-sex individuals pairing together and cooperating to raise offspring over many years is a rare occurrence in the animal kingdom. Cooperative breeding, in which animals help raise offspring that are not their own, is often attributed to kin selection when individuals are related, or altruism when individuals are unrelated.
The study documents long-term pairing of unrelated female Laysan albatross (Phoebastria immutabilis) and shows how cooperation may have arisen as a result of a skewed sex ratio in this species. Thirty-one percent of Laysan albatross pairs on Oahu were female-female, and the overall sex ratio was 59% females as a result of female-biased immigration.
Female-female pairs fledged fewer offspring than male-female pairs, but this was a better alternative than not breeding. In most female-female pairs that raised a chick in more than 1 year, at least one offspring was genetically related to each female, indicating that both females had opportunities to reproduce. These results demonstrate how changes in the sex ratio of a population can shift the social structure and cause cooperative behavior to arise in a monogamous species, and they also underscore the importance of genetically sexing monomorphic species.
Source: University of Hawaii at Manoa
Related
- Dining out in an ocean of plastic: How foraging albatrosses put plastic on the menuTue, 27 Oct 2009, 20:35:23 EDT
- The importance of being helpful -- Cooperative cichlids boost their own reproductive successFri, 15 May 2009, 10:38:07 EDT
- Albatross camera reveals fascinating feeding interaction with killer whaleTue, 6 Oct 2009, 21:35:50 EDT
- Male Australian redback spiders employ courtship strategies to preserve their lifeThu, 22 Oct 2009, 12:36:16 EDT
- Female choice benefits mothers more than offspringThu, 22 Oct 2009, 14:47:20 EDT
Other sources
- Laysan Albatross Employs 'Dual Mommies'from Science DailyThu, 29 May 2008, 10:14:24 EDT
- Albatross employs 'dual mommies'from Science BlogWed, 28 May 2008, 9:35:13 EDT
- Researcher finds Laysan albatross employs 'dual mommies'from PhysorgWed, 28 May 2008, 9:21:07 EDT
- Female albatrosses shack upfrom MSNBC: ScienceTue, 27 May 2008, 20:14:04 EDT
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