Authors
Naerhulan Halimubieke, Krisztina Kupán, José O Valdebenito, Vojtěch Kubelka, María Cristina Carmona-Isunza, Daniel Burgas, Daniel Catlin, James JH St Clair, Jonathan Cohen, Jordi Figuerola, Maï Yasué, Matthew Johnson, Mauro Mencarelli, Medardo Cruz-López, Michelle Stantial, Michael A Weston, Penn Lloyd, Pinjia Que, Tomás Montalvo, Udita Bansal, Grant C McDonald, Yang Liu, András Kosztolányi, Tamás Székely
Publication date
2020/9/23
Journal
Scientific Reports
Volume
10
Issue
1
Pages
15576
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK
Description
When individuals breed more than once, parents are faced with the choice of whether to re-mate with their old partner or divorce and select a new mate. Evolutionary theory predicts that, following successful reproduction with a given partner, that partner should be retained for future reproduction. However, recent work in a polygamous bird, has instead indicated that successful parents divorced more often than failed breeders (Halimubieke et al. in Ecol Evol 9:10734–10745, 2019), because one parent can benefit by mating with a new partner and reproducing shortly after divorce. Here we investigate whether successful breeding predicts divorce using data from 14 well-monitored populations of plovers (Charadrius spp.). We show that successful nesting leads to divorce, whereas nest failure leads to retention of the mate for follow-up breeding. Plovers that divorced their partners and simultaneously deserted their …
Total citations
2020202120222023202423553
Scholar articles
N Halimubieke, K Kupán, JO Valdebenito, V Kubelka… - Scientific Reports, 2020