148 results on '"CANTARERO, Alejandro"'
Search Results
2. Testing the carotenoid-based sexual signalling mechanism by altering CYP2J19 gene expression and colour in a bird species
- Author
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Cantarero, Alejandro, Andrade, Pedro, Carneiro, Miguel, Moreno-Borrallo, Adrián, and Alonso-Alvarez, Carlos
- Published
- 2020
3. Testing the shared-pathway hypothesis in the carotenoid-based coloration of red crossbills
- Author
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Cantarero, Alejandro, Mateo, Rafael, Camarero, Pablo R, Alonso, Daniel, Fernandez-Eslava, Blanca, and Alonso-Alvarez, Carlos
- Published
- 2020
4. Life-long testosterone and antiandrogen treatments affect the survival and reproduction of captive male red-legged partridges ( Alectoris rufa )
- Author
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Alonso-Alvarez, Carlos, Cantarero, Alejandro, Romero-Haro, Ana Ángela, Chastel, Olivier, and Pérez-Rodríguez, Lorenzo
- Published
- 2020
5. An experimental increase in female mass during the fertile phase leads to higher levels of extra-pair paternity in pied flycatchers Ficedula hypoleuca
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Plaza, Mireia, Cantarero, Alejandro, and Moreno, Juan
- Published
- 2019
6. Parental feeding responses to experimental short-term partner removal in a species with male and female brood desertion
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Cantarero, Alejandro, Plaza, Mireia, Moreno, Juan, and Griggio, M.
- Published
- 2019
7. Female incubation attendance and nest vigilance reflect social signaling capacity: a field experiment
- Author
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Plaza, Mireia, Cantarero, Alejandro, Cuervo, José Javier, and Moreno, Juan
- Published
- 2018
8. Repeatable negotiation rules? Only females show repeatable responses to partner removal in a brood-provisioning songbird
- Author
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Baldan, Davide, primary, Beccardi, Matteo, additional, Fuertes-Recuero, Manuel, additional, Schiavinato, Matteo, additional, Zampa, Lia, additional, Pilastro, Andrea, additional, and Cantarero, Alejandro, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Corregidor-Castro et al 2022_ Heterozygosity rock sparrow
- Author
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Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Cantarero, Alejandro [0000-0002-5816-701X], Corregidor-Castro, Alejandro [alejandro.corregidorcastro@phd.unipd.it], Corregidor-Castro, Alejandro, Griggio, Matteo, Mingozzi, Antonio T., Pilastro, Andrea, Grapputo, Alessandro, Plaza Cusine, Mireia, Cantarero, Alejandro, Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Cantarero, Alejandro [0000-0002-5816-701X], Corregidor-Castro, Alejandro [alejandro.corregidorcastro@phd.unipd.it], Corregidor-Castro, Alejandro, Griggio, Matteo, Mingozzi, Antonio T., Pilastro, Andrea, Grapputo, Alessandro, Plaza Cusine, Mireia, and Cantarero, Alejandro
- Abstract
Dataset of the scientific article "Heterozygosity, genetic similarity and extra-pair paternity variation in two populations of Rock Sparrow Petronia petronia: a within- and between- populations comparison".
- Published
- 2022
10. Supplemental Information for: Population differences in the length and early-life dynamics of telomeres among European pied flycatchers
- Author
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Cantarero, Alejandro [0000-0002-5816-701X], Martínez-Padilla, Jesús [0000-0003-2956-5163], Potti, Jaime [0000-0002-2284-0022], Kärkkäinen, Tiia [tmakark@gmail.com], Kärkkäinen, Tiia, Laaksonen, Toni, Burgess, Malcolm, Cantarero, Alejandro, Martínez-Padilla, Jesús, Potti, Jaime, Moreno, Juan, Thomson, Robert L., Tilgar, Vallo, Stier, Antoine, Cantarero, Alejandro [0000-0002-5816-701X], Martínez-Padilla, Jesús [0000-0003-2956-5163], Potti, Jaime [0000-0002-2284-0022], Kärkkäinen, Tiia [tmakark@gmail.com], Kärkkäinen, Tiia, Laaksonen, Toni, Burgess, Malcolm, Cantarero, Alejandro, Martínez-Padilla, Jesús, Potti, Jaime, Moreno, Juan, Thomson, Robert L., Tilgar, Vallo, and Stier, Antoine
- Published
- 2022
11. First Report of Polymelia in a Passerine Bird, the Pied Flycatcher
- Author
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Fuertes-Recuero, Manuel, primary, Longhin, Davide, additional, Chiesurin, Leonardo, additional, Tusini, Samuele, additional, Fontanillas Pérez, Juan Carlos, additional, and Cantarero, Alejandro, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Do Barn Swallow nestlings incur an oxidative cost of begging?
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Conferencia de Rectores de las Universidades Españolas, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (España), Fuertes-Recuero, Manuel [0000-0003-0736-8791], Fuertes-Recuero, Manuel, Cantarero, Alejandro, Redondo, Alberto J., Sánchez-Sánchez, Nuria, Redondo, T., Conferencia de Rectores de las Universidades Españolas, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (España), Fuertes-Recuero, Manuel [0000-0003-0736-8791], Fuertes-Recuero, Manuel, Cantarero, Alejandro, Redondo, Alberto J., Sánchez-Sánchez, Nuria, and Redondo, T.
- Abstract
Some theoretical models predict that nestling begging must be a costly activity to transmit reliable information to parents about offspring hunger. One candidate cost is oxidative stress, which could impair growth or immune function. This hypothesis predicts that nestlings in a poor oxidative status should pay higher costs for a given amount of begging, hence beg at lower rates for a similar degree of hunger. To test this prediction, we experimentally induced a transient alteration of the oxidative status of Barn Swallow (Hirundo rustica) nestlings by administering them either a single dose of a pro-oxidant substance (BSO) or an antioxidant (vitamin E), and recorded their begging behaviour. Chicks treated with vitamin E increased their begging rates in the hours following treatment. However, and contrary to prediction, BSO nestlings did not decrease begging compared to controls. These inconsistent results are difficult to explain by the hypothesis that begging performance is mediated by the oxidative status of nestlings because chicks with an impaired oxidative status (the BSO group) begged the same as controls. Alternatively, vitamin E may alleviate the inhibitory effects on begging of stress responses mediated by glucocorticoids. This study suggests that oxidative costs of begging are minor or absent in this species. Future studies should consider alternative explanations for an association between oxidative status, antioxidant supplementation and begging behaviour, particularly those involving glucocorticoids.
- Published
- 2023
13. Data for: Repeatable negotiation rules? only females show repeatable response to partner removal in a brood-provisioning songbird
- Author
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Baldan, Davide, Beccardi, Matteo, Fuertes-Recuero, Manuel, Schiavinato, Matteo, Zampa, Lia, Pilastro, Andrea, Cantarero, Alejandro, Baldan, Davide, Beccardi, Matteo, Fuertes-Recuero, Manuel, Schiavinato, Matteo, Zampa, Lia, Pilastro, Andrea, and Cantarero, Alejandro
- Abstract
Theoretical models indicate that the evolution of biparental care depends on how parents behaviorally negotiate their level of care in response to those of their partner and whether sexes and individuals consistently vary in their response (compensatory response). While compensatory response has been widely investigated empirically, its repeatability has rarely been assessed. In this study, we used a reaction norm approach to investigate the repeatability of the compensatory offspring provisioning of a parent after temporary removal of its partner in the pied flycatcher (Ficedula hypoleuca) across different breeding seasons and partners. We found that only females partially compensated for the short-term removal of the partner and their response was significantly repeatable across years while breeding with different partners. This study highlights the importance of considering among individual differences in negotiation rules to better understand the role of negotiation mechanisms in the evolution of parental care strategies.
- Published
- 2023
14. Repeatable negotiation rules? only females show repeatable responses to partner removal in a brood-provisioning songbird
- Author
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Baldan, Davide, Beccardi, Matteo, Fuertes-Recuero, Manuel, Schiavinato, Matteo, Zampa, Lia, Pilastro, Andrea, Cantarero, Alejandro, Baldan, Davide, Beccardi, Matteo, Fuertes-Recuero, Manuel, Schiavinato, Matteo, Zampa, Lia, Pilastro, Andrea, and Cantarero, Alejandro
- Abstract
Theoretical models indicate that the evolution of biparental care depends on how parents behaviourally negotiate their level of care in response to those of their partner and whether sexes and individuals consistently vary in their response (compensatory response). While the compensatory response has been widely investigated empirically, its repeatability has rarely been assessed. In this study, we used a reaction norm approach to investigate the repeatability of the compensatory offspring provisioning of a parent after temporary removal of its partner in the pied flycatcher (Ficedula hypoleuca) across different breeding seasons and partners. We found that only females partially compensated for the short-term removal of the partner and their response was significantly repeatable across years while breeding with different partners. This study highlights the importance of considering among individual differences in negotiation rules to better understand the role of negotiation mechanisms in the evolution of parental care strategies.
- Published
- 2023
15. Host preference by blood-sucking flying insects in Blue Tit nestlings (Aves: Cyanistes caeruleus): influence of host sex and behavior
- Author
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García-del-Río, Marina, Castaño-Vázquez, Francisco, Martínez, Javier, Martínez de la Puente, Josué, Cantarero, Alejandro, García Velasco, Javier, Merino, Yago, Merino, Santiago, García-del-Río, Marina, Castaño-Vázquez, Francisco, Martínez, Javier, Martínez de la Puente, Josué, Cantarero, Alejandro, García Velasco, Javier, Merino, Yago, and Merino, Santiago
- Abstract
Host selection by insect vectors plays an important role in the transmission of vector-borne infectious diseases. Sex-biased infections are frequently reported in vertebrates and may be due to sex differences in susceptibility caused by, among others, the effect of sex hormones on immunity or by differential exposure to parasites. We captured biting midges and blackflies with recent blood meals in 51 blue tit nests during 2019 and 2021 and analyzed the meals to determine molecularly the sex of the bird that insect vectors fed on. By comparing the sex ratio in those samples to the sex-ratio of the nestlings in each nest we know whether vectors fed on their hosts randomly or showed a preference for a particular sex. Although the relationship between both sex-ratios was not significant, males were bitten more frequently than females in the second year. In addition, we used samples collected during 2022 to test for the possible effect of nestlings exposure to insect bites. To do this, we analyzed videos of the nestling activity inside nest-boxes recorded during the period of maximum activity of vectors, and explore the exposure of each nestling to insect bites based on their position within the nest (time spent above or below other nestlings). Finally, we test whether exposure was related to the risk to be bitten by identifying nestlings molecularly from each blood meal recovered from vectors. These results will help to understand the mechanisms of host preference for flying insect vectors and the transmission of wildlife pathogens.
- Published
- 2023
16. Repeatable negotiation rules? Only females show repeatable responses to partner removal in abrood-provisioning songbird
- Author
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Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), European Commission, Baldan, Davide, Beccardi, Matteo, Fuertes-Recuero, Manuel, Schiavinato, Matteo, Zampa, Lia, Pilastro, Andrea, Cantarero, Alejandro, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), European Commission, Baldan, Davide, Beccardi, Matteo, Fuertes-Recuero, Manuel, Schiavinato, Matteo, Zampa, Lia, Pilastro, Andrea, and Cantarero, Alejandro
- Abstract
Theoretical models indicate that the evolution of biparental care depends onhow parents behaviourally negotiate their level of care in response to thoseof their partner and whether sexes and individuals consistently vary in theirresponse (compensatory response). While the compensatory response hasbeen widely investigated empirically, its repeatability has rarely beenassessed. In this study, we used a reaction norm approach to investigatethe repeatability of the compensatory offspring provisioning of a parentafter temporary removal of its partner in the pied flycatcher (Ficedula hypo-leuca) across different breeding seasons and partners. We found that onlyfemales partially compensated for the short-term removal of the partnerand their response was significantly repeatable across years while breedingwith different partners. This study highlights the importance of consideringamong individual differences in negotiation rules to better understand therole of negotiation mechanisms in the evolution of parental care strategies.
- Published
- 2023
17. Diversidad de coleópteros de la Familia Dermestidae en nidos de Herrerillo común (Cyanistes caeruleus) y su variación en función de la temperatura del nido
- Author
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García-Velasco, Juan Antonio, García-del-Río, Marina, Háva, Jiří, Merino, Yago, Castaño-Vázquez, Francisco, Cantarero, Alejandro, Selfa Arlandis, Jesús, Merino, Santiago, García-Velasco, Juan Antonio, García-del-Río, Marina, Háva, Jiří, Merino, Yago, Castaño-Vázquez, Francisco, Cantarero, Alejandro, Selfa Arlandis, Jesús, and Merino, Santiago
- Abstract
Presentamos los resultados de un estudio sobre la diversidad de derméstidos que habitan los nidos de una especie de ave troglodita, el herrerillo común (Cyanistes caeruleus), así como el efecto sobre estos Coleópteros de diversos factores, entre ellos la temperatura y la humedad relativa en el interior del nido. Se identificaron diez taxones, seis como especies reconocidas y cuatro como taxones larvarios identificados a nivel de género. La mayoría de los derméstidos encontrados, en estado larvario, eran derméstidos nidícolas del género Anthrenus. Los ejemplares de derméstidos necrobiontes (aquellos que se alimentan de cadáveres tanto en fase larvaria como adulta) se encontraron en menor proporción, y casi siempre en estado adulto. En los nidos de herrerillo donde se aumentó experimentalmente la temperatura se encontraron más larvas de derméstidos que en los nidos control, y en aquellos nidos donde se registraron valores más altos de temperatura se encontraron más derméstidos adultos necrobiontes del género Dermestes.
- Published
- 2023
18. Extra-pair paternity is not repeatable between years in Pied Flycatchers (Ficedula hypoleuca): a role for social context
- Author
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Plaza, Mireia, Cantarero, Alejandro, Machordom, Annie, Serrano-Davies, Eva, Moreno, Juan, Plaza, Mireia, Cantarero, Alejandro, Machordom, Annie, Serrano-Davies, Eva, and Moreno, Juan
- Abstract
Extra-pair paternity (EPP) is the consequence of the interactions between a social pair and extra-pair males during the female's fertile phase in a specific social context and ecological environment. Although EPP occurs in many avian species, there is a lack of understanding of how environmental factors may impact its frequency. Accordingly, the relative importance of individual characteristics on the one hand, and of their immediate social environment on the other, may affect EPP repeatability and thereby the capacity of this trait to respond to selection. If EPP is an individual genetically based trait that may respond to selection, we expect it to be repeatable across breeding seasons. To check this possibility, we analysed the within-individual repeatability in EPP of breeding males and females in two natural populations of Pied Flycatchers Ficedula hypoleuca in central Spain during three field seasons. We then studied the relationship between EPP and individual male and female traits (only some of which were themselves repeatable), as well as key context variables such as breeding synchrony and population density. Our results showed no repeatability for EPP in either sex. We found a positive association with laying date and stronger associations of EPP with male plumage and morphological traits than with female characteristics. We suggest that the variable social environment is an important modulator of EPP patterns, and that differences between field EPP studies in this respect may explain contradictory results in the same species, even in the same populations in different years.
- Published
- 2023
19. Extra-pair paternity is not repeatable between years in Pied Flycatchers (Ficedula hypoleuca): a role for social contex
- Author
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Ministerio de Economía y Empresa (España), Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Ministerio de Educación (España), Plaza Cusine, Mireia, Cantarero, Alejandro, Machordom, Annie, Serrano-Davies, Eva, Moreno Klemming, Juan, Ministerio de Economía y Empresa (España), Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Ministerio de Educación (España), Plaza Cusine, Mireia, Cantarero, Alejandro, Machordom, Annie, Serrano-Davies, Eva, and Moreno Klemming, Juan
- Abstract
Extra-pair paternity (EPP) is the consequence of the interactions between a social pair and extra-pair males during the female’s fertile phase in a specific social context and ecological environment. Although EPP occurs in many avian species, there is a lack of understanding of how environmental factors may impact its frequency. Accordingly, the relative importance of individual characteristics on the one hand, and of their immediate social environment on the other, may affect EPP repeatability and thereby the capacity of this trait to respond to selection. If EPP is an individual genetically based trait that may respond to selection, we expect it to be repeatable across breeding seasons. To check this possibility, we analysed the within-individual repeatability in EPP of breeding males and females in two natural populations of Pied Flycatchers Ficedula hypoleuca in central Spain during three field seasons. We then studied the relationship between EPP and individual male and female traits (only some of which were themselves repeatable), as well as key context variables such as breeding synchrony and population density. Our results showed no repeatability for EPP in either sex. We found a positive association with laying date and stronger associations of EPP with male plumage and morphological traits than with female characteristics. We suggest that the variable social environment is an important modulator of EPP patterns, and that differences between field EPP studies in this respect may explain contradictory results in the same species, even in the same populations in different years.
- Published
- 2023
20. Males feed their mates more and take more risks for nestlings with larger female-built nests: an experimental study in the Nuthatch Sitta europaea
- Author
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Cantarero, Alejandro, López-Arrabé, Jimena, Plaza, Mireia, Saavedra-Garcés, Irene, and Moreno, Juan
- Published
- 2016
21. Mate choice is affected by parasite infestation rate of the choosing individual as well as of potential mating partners.
- Author
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Cantarero, Alejandro, Dolnik, Olga V, Griggio, Matteo, and Hoi, Herbert
- Subjects
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PARASITES , *ENGLISH sparrow , *COCCIDIOSIS - Abstract
Parasites are known to be a key driving force in mate choice and are important for the expression and evolution of ornaments and behavioral traits being used. However, there is little experimental evidence on how the parasite's burden of the choosing individual is integrated into the mate-choice process and how it affects decision-making, especially in relation to parasite infestation of potential mates. Thus, the aim of our study was to determine whether female house sparrows Passer domesticus adjust their mate preference according to their own as well as the parasite load of prospective partners. To do this, we experimentally manipulated female parasite load and determined their mate preferences prior to and after parasite treatment. We manipulated the chronic coccidian parasite burden of females either by initiating the acute infection phase via re-infecting them with coccidian or by temporally reducing the parasite load of coccidia. We then measured the effect of this manipulation on mate preference by presenting females with a choice of four stimuli: three males with similar ornaments, but unmanipulated, naturally varying chronic coccidiosis levels, and an unmanipulated control female. Additionally, we recorded some males' behavior in relation to their infection status pointing toward an increased or reduced interest in mating. We found that females preferred highly infested males prior to manipulation, regardless of their own infestation level. However, after manipulation, infested females avoided highly infested males probably in response to the deterioration of their health condition by parasites. Our study suggests that mate-choice decisions are more complex when they are mediated by parasites. The implications of parasites for evolutionary theories of sexual signaling and mate choice are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Species-specific song responses emerge as a by-product of tuning to the local dialect
- Author
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Wheatcroft, David, primary, Bliard, Louis, additional, El Harouchi, Myriam, additional, López-Idiáquez, David, additional, Kärkkäinen, Tiia, additional, Kraft, Fanny-Linn H., additional, Muriel, Jaime, additional, Rajan, Samyuktha, additional, Tuvillo, Tomas, additional, Burgess, Malcolm D., additional, Cantarero, Alejandro, additional, Laaksonen, Toni, additional, Martínez-Padilla, Jesús, additional, Visser, Marcel E., additional, and Qvarnström, Anna, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Mate choice is affected by parasite infestation rate of the choosing individual as well as of potential mating partners
- Author
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Cantarero, Alejandro, primary, Dolnik, Olga V, additional, Griggio, Matteo, additional, and Hoi, Herbert, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Cantarero et al CYP2J19 manipulation in zebra finches
- Author
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Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), Fundación Ramón Areces, Cantarero, Alejandro [0000-0002-5816-701X], Andrade, Pedro [0000-0003-2540-2471], Carneiro, Miguel [0000-0001-9882-7775], Alonso-Álvarez, Carlos [0000-0002-4765-551X], Alonso-Álvarez, Carlos, Cantarero, Alejandro, Andrade, Pedro, Carneiro, Miguel, Moreno-Borralbo, Adrián, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), Fundación Ramón Areces, Cantarero, Alejandro [0000-0002-5816-701X], Andrade, Pedro [0000-0003-2540-2471], Carneiro, Miguel [0000-0001-9882-7775], Alonso-Álvarez, Carlos [0000-0002-4765-551X], Alonso-Álvarez, Carlos, Cantarero, Alejandro, Andrade, Pedro, Carneiro, Miguel, and Moreno-Borralbo, Adrián
- Abstract
This is a dataset that allows testing the effect of a mito-targeted antioxidant (mitoTEMPO) and a thyroid hormone (T3) on the level of expression of the gene CYP2J19 in the bill tissue of male zebra finches, and also their impact on bill redness and circulating carotenoid levels.
- Published
- 2020
25. Cantarero et al 2020 Evolution repository data
- Author
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Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Fundación Ramón Areces, Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), Cantarero, Alejandro [0000-0002-5816-701X], Mateo, Rafael [0000-0003-1307-9152], Camarero, Pablo [0000-0002-2047-6554], Fernández-Eslava, Blanca [0000-0002-1216-2088], Alonso-Álvarez, Carlos [0000-0002-4765-551X], Alonso-Álvarez, Carlos [carlos.alonso@csic.es], Cantarero, Alejandro, Mateo, Rafael, Camarero, Pablo R., Alonso, Daniel, Fernández-Eslava, Blanca, Alonso-Álvarez, Carlos, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Fundación Ramón Areces, Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), Cantarero, Alejandro [0000-0002-5816-701X], Mateo, Rafael [0000-0003-1307-9152], Camarero, Pablo [0000-0002-2047-6554], Fernández-Eslava, Blanca [0000-0002-1216-2088], Alonso-Álvarez, Carlos [0000-0002-4765-551X], Alonso-Álvarez, Carlos [carlos.alonso@csic.es], Cantarero, Alejandro, Mateo, Rafael, Camarero, Pablo R., Alonso, Daniel, Fernández-Eslava, Blanca, and Alonso-Álvarez, Carlos
- Abstract
This is a dataset that allowed testing the shared-pathway hypothesis on the honest signaling based on animal colorations created by red ketocarotenoid pigments. The dataset includes levels of pigments and vitamins in blood and feathers as well as feather coloration in captive Eurasian crossbills under captivity.
- Published
- 2020
26. Species-specific song responses emerge as a by-product of tuning to the local dialect
- Author
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Wheatcroft, David, Bliard, Louis, El Harouchi, Myriam, Lopez-Idiaquez, David, Kärkkäinen, Tiia, Kraft, Fanny-Linn H., Muriel, Jaime, Rajan, Samyuktha, Tuvillo, Tomas, Burgess, Malcolm D., Cantarero, Alejandro, Laaksonen, Toni, Martinez-Padilla, Jesus, Visser, Marcel E., Qvarnström, Anna, Wheatcroft, David, Bliard, Louis, El Harouchi, Myriam, Lopez-Idiaquez, David, Kärkkäinen, Tiia, Kraft, Fanny-Linn H., Muriel, Jaime, Rajan, Samyuktha, Tuvillo, Tomas, Burgess, Malcolm D., Cantarero, Alejandro, Laaksonen, Toni, Martinez-Padilla, Jesus, Visser, Marcel E., and Qvarnström, Anna
- Abstract
Oscine birds preferentially respond to certain sounds over others from an early age, which focuses subse-quent learning onto sexually relevant songs.1-3 Songs vary both across species and, due to cultural evolution, among populations of the same species. As a result, early song responses are expected to be shaped by se-lection both to avoid the fitness costs of cross-species learning4 and to promote learning of population -typical songs.5 These sources of selection are not mutually exclusive but can result in distinct geographic patterns of song responses in juvenile birds: if the risks of interspecific mating are the main driver of early song discrimination, then discrimination should be strongest where closely related species co-occur.4 In contrast, if early discrimination primarily facilitates learning local songs, then it should be tuned to songs typical of the local dialect.5-7 Here, we experimentally assess the drivers of song discrimination in nestling pied flycatchers (Ficedula hypoleuca). We first demonstrate that early discrimination against the songs of the closely related collared flycatcher (F. albicollis) is not strongly affected by co-occurrence. Second, across six European populations, we show that nestlings' early song responses are tuned to their local song dialect and that responses to the songs of collared flycatchers are similarly weak as to those of other conspecific dialects. Taken together, these findings provide clear experimental support for the hypothesis that cultural evolution, in conjunction with associated learning predispositions, drives the emergence of pre-mating reproductive barriers.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Species-specific song responses emerge as a by-product of tuning to the local dialect
- Author
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Swedish Research Council, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Wheatcroft, David, Bliard, Louis, El Harouchi, Myriam, López-Idiáquez, David, Kärkkäinen, Tiia, Kraft, Fanny-Linn H., Muriel, Jaime, Rajan, Samyuktha, Tuvillo, Tomas, Burgess, Malcolm D., Cantarero, Alejandro, Laaksonen, Toni, Martínez-Padilla, Jesús, Visser, Marcel E., Qvarnström, Anna, Swedish Research Council, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Wheatcroft, David, Bliard, Louis, El Harouchi, Myriam, López-Idiáquez, David, Kärkkäinen, Tiia, Kraft, Fanny-Linn H., Muriel, Jaime, Rajan, Samyuktha, Tuvillo, Tomas, Burgess, Malcolm D., Cantarero, Alejandro, Laaksonen, Toni, Martínez-Padilla, Jesús, Visser, Marcel E., and Qvarnström, Anna
- Abstract
Oscine birds preferentially respond to certain sounds over others from an early age, which focuses subsequent learning onto sexually relevant songs.1,2,3 Songs vary both across species and, due to cultural evolution, among populations of the same species. As a result, early song responses are expected to be shaped by selection both to avoid the fitness costs of cross-species learning4 and to promote learning of population-typical songs.5 These sources of selection are not mutually exclusive but can result in distinct geographic patterns of song responses in juvenile birds: if the risks of interspecific mating are the main driver of early song discrimination, then discrimination should be strongest where closely related species co-occur.4 In contrast, if early discrimination primarily facilitates learning local songs, then it should be tuned to songs typical of the local dialect.5,6,7 Here, we experimentally assess the drivers of song discrimination in nestling pied flycatchers (Ficedula hypoleuca). We first demonstrate that early discrimination against the songs of the closely related collared flycatcher (F. albicollis) is not strongly affected by co-occurrence. Second, across six European populations, we show that nestlings¿ early song responses are tuned to their local song dialect and that responses to the songs of collared flycatchers are similarly weak as to those of other conspecific dialects. Taken together, these findings provide clear experimental support for the hypothesis that cultural evolution, in conjunction with associated learning predispositions, drives the emergence of pre-mating reproductive barriers.
- Published
- 2022
28. Species-specific song responses emerge as a by-product of tuning to the local dialect.
- Author
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Biología vegetal y ecología, Landaren biologia eta ekologia, Wheatcroft, David, Bliard, Louis, El Harouchi, Myriam, López Idiáquez, David, Kärkkäinen, Tiia, Kraft, Fanny-Linn H., Muriel, Jaime, Rajan, Samyuktha, Tuvillo, Tomás, Burgess, Malcolm D., Cantarero, Alejandro, Laaksonen, Toni, Martínez Padilla, Jesús, Visser, Marcel E., Qvarnström, Anna, Biología vegetal y ecología, Landaren biologia eta ekologia, Wheatcroft, David, Bliard, Louis, El Harouchi, Myriam, López Idiáquez, David, Kärkkäinen, Tiia, Kraft, Fanny-Linn H., Muriel, Jaime, Rajan, Samyuktha, Tuvillo, Tomás, Burgess, Malcolm D., Cantarero, Alejandro, Laaksonen, Toni, Martínez Padilla, Jesús, Visser, Marcel E., and Qvarnström, Anna
- Abstract
Oscine birds preferentially respond to certain sounds over others from an early age, which focuses subsequent learning onto sexually relevant songs.1-3 Songs vary both across species and, due to cultural evolution, among populations of the same species. As a result, early song responses are expected to be shaped by selection both to avoid the fitness costs of cross-species learning4 and to promote learning of population-typical songs.5 These sources of selection are not mutually exclusive but can result in distinct geographic patterns of song responses in juvenile birds: if the risks of interspecific mating are the main driver of early song discrimination, then discrimination should be strongest where closely related species co-occur.4 In contrast, if early discrimination primarily facilitates learning local songs, then it should be tuned to songs typical of the local dialect.5-7 Here, we experimentally assess the drivers of song discrimination in nestling pied flycatchers (Ficedula hypoleuca). We first demonstrate that early discrimination against the songs of the closely related collared flycatcher (F.albicollis) is not strongly affected by co-occurrence. Second, across six European populations, we show that nestlings' early song responses are tuned to their local song dialect and that responses to the songs of collared flycatchers are similarly weak as to those of other conspecific dialects. Taken together, these findings provide clear experimental support for the hypothesis that cultural evolution, in conjunction with associated learning predispositions, drives the emergence of pre-mating reproductive barriers.
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- 2022
29. Carotenoid ketolase gene expression and bill redness altered by mito-targeted antioxidant and thyroid hormone in Zebra Finches
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Cantarero, Alejandro, Andrade, Pedro, Carneiro, Miguel, Moreno-Borralbo, Adrián, Alonso-Álvarez, Carlos, Cantarero, Alejandro, Andrade, Pedro, Carneiro, Miguel, Moreno-Borralbo, Adrián, and Alonso-Álvarez, Carlos
- Abstract
Ornaments can evolve to reveal individual quality when their production/maintenance costs make them reliable as `signals¿ or if their expression level is intrinsically linked to condition by some unfalsifiable mechanism (indices). The latter has been mostly associated with traits constrained by body size. In red ketocarotenoid-based colorations, that link could, instead, be established with cell respiration at the inner mitochondrial membrane (IMM). The production mechanism could be independent of resource (yellow carotenoids) availability, thus discarding costs linked to allocation trade-offs. A gene coding for a ketolase enzyme (CYP2J19) responsible for converting dietary yellow carotenoids to red ketocarotenoids has recently been described. We treated male Zebra Finches with an antioxidant designed to penetrate the IMM (mitoTEMPO) and a thyroid hormone (triiodothyronine) with known hypermetabolic effects. Among hormone controls, MitoTEMPO downregulated CYP2J19 in the bill (a red ketocarotenoid-based ornament), supporting the mitochondrial involvement in ketolase function. Both treatments interacted when increasing hormone dosage, indicating that mitochondria and thyroid metabolisms could simultaneously regulate coloration. Moreover, CYP2J19 expression was positively correlated to redness but also to yellow carotenoid levels in the blood. However, treatment effects were not annulated when controlling for blood carotenoid variability, which suggests that costs linked to resource availability could be minor.
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- 2022
30. Relocation to avoid costs: a hypothesis on red carotenoid-based signals based on recent CYP2J19 gene expression data
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Alonso-Álvarez, Carlos, Andrade, Pedro, Cantarero, Alejandro, Carneiro, Miguel, Alonso-Álvarez, Carlos, Andrade, Pedro, Cantarero, Alejandro, and Carneiro, Miguel
- Abstract
Sexual and social selections drive the evolution of conspicuous colorations in many animal species. These traits would function as individual quality signals whether they transmit reliable information. In animal signaling theory, that reliability is guaranteed if those costs of trait production are too expensive for low-quality individuals or, alternatively, assured if the trait expression is inherently linked to individual quality and thus cannot be falsified (“index signals”). A new hypothesis proposes that colored ornaments produced by red keto-carotenoid pigments could act as unfalsifiable index signals similar to other classical examples where quality was ultimately linked to individual body size. These ketocarotenoid pigments are often obtained by enzymatic transformation of dietary yellow carotenoids. Recently, the first enzyme performing this transformation was described: CYP2J19. It belongs to the cytochrome p450 superfamily. It is presumably located in the inner mitochondrial membrane, therefore connecting color expression with cell respiration efficacy. Nevertheless, it is still unknown if the tissue where this cell mechanism acts affects signal honesty and evolution. CYP2J19 expression levels in different species and tissues are currently available. We review current data in avian species and propose that CYP2J19 activity could have evolved by being relocated from the hepatic tissue to the epidermis in those birds where the red color is expressed in non-feathered bare parts. Bare parts require continuous carotenoid mobilization to sustain color. We suggest that tissue-based relocation avoids production costs due to potential CYP2J19 interfering with vital liver functions. Implications for signal reliability in ornamental evolution are discussed.
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- 2022
31. Heterozygosity, genetic similarity and extra-pair paternity variation in two populations of rock sparrow Petronia petronia: a within and between populations comparison
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Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Corregidor-Castro, Alejandro, Griggio, Matteo, Grapputo, Alessandro, Mingozzi, Toni, Pilastro, Andrea, Plaza Cusine, Mireia, Cantarero, Alejandro, Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Corregidor-Castro, Alejandro, Griggio, Matteo, Grapputo, Alessandro, Mingozzi, Toni, Pilastro, Andrea, Plaza Cusine, Mireia, and Cantarero, Alejandro
- Abstract
Extra-pair paternity (EPP) has been broadly reported in socially monogamous bird species and it has been hypothesized that females engage in extra-pair copulations to increase the genetic variability of the offspring and to reduce the risk of inbreeding and genetic incompatibilities. This hypothesis makes two predictions: within populations, females should engage with more dissimilar/heterozygous males and, among popula - tions, females should pursue more frequently EPP in populations characterized by a lower genetic variability and a higher homozygosity. However, support is still unclear throughout literature, and usually involves the study of a single population. We compared a peripheral population of rock sparrow Petronia petronia living at the marginal distribution of the species and characterized by a high EPP level (> 50%) (Italian Alps) with a population located in the centre of the species’ distribution (central Spain), to understand if variations in EPP could be linked to differences in mean heterozygosity and genetic similarity both between and within populations. EPP in the Spanish population was 18.1%, three times lower than that observed in the Alpine one (51.2%), and this difference remained fairly constant across different years. Supporting the between populations prediction, we found lower heterozygosity and reduced allelic richness in the Alpine population compared to the Spanish one. In contrast, social and extra-pair males, as well as within and extra-pair offspring, did not significantly differ in terms of genetic similarity and heterozygosity within brood in either population. Social and extra-pair males did not differ in tarsus size, body weight or yellow badge size, suggesting that females were not choosing extra-pair partners based on heterozygosity, genetic similarity or phenotypic quality. Although based on a limited sample in the within population analysis, our results indicate that EPP may evolve in response to a low level of genetic vari
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- 2022
32. Wild common crossbills produce redder body feathers when their wings are clipped
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Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (España), Fernández-Eslava, Blanca, Cantarero, Alejandro, Alonso, Daniel, Alonso-Álvarez, Carlos, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (España), Fernández-Eslava, Blanca, Cantarero, Alejandro, Alonso, Daniel, and Alonso-Álvarez, Carlos
- Abstract
[Background] The animal signaling theory posits that conspicuous colorations exhibited by many animals have evolved as reliable signals of individual quality. Red carotenoid-based ornaments may depend on enzymatic transformations (oxidation) of dietary yellow carotenoids, which could occur in the inner mitochondrial membrane (IMM). Thus, carotenoid ketolation and cell respiration could share the same biochemical pathways. Accordingly, the level of trait expression (redness) would directly reveal the efficiency of individuals’ metabolism and, hence, the bearer quality in an unfalsifiable way. Different avian studies have described that the flying effort may induce oxidative stress. A redox metabolism modified during the flight could thus influence the carotenoid conversion rate and, ultimately, animal coloration. Here, we aimed to infer the link between red carotenoid-based ornament expression and flight metabolism by increasing flying effort in wild male common crossbills Loxia curvirostra (Linnaeus). In this order, 295 adult males were captured with mist nets in an Iberian population during winter. Approximately half of the birds were experimentally handicapped through wing feather clipping to increase their flying effort, the other half being used as a control group. To stimulate the plumage regrown of a small surface during a short time-lapse, we also plucked the rump feathers from all the birds., [Results] A fraction of the birds with fully grown rump feathers (34 individuals) could be recaptured during the subsequent weeks. We did not detect any significant bias in recovery rates and morphological variables in this reduced subsample. However, among recaptured birds, individuals with experimentally impaired flying capacity showed body mass loss, whereas controls showed a trend to increase their weight. Moreover, clipped males showed redder feathers in the newly regrown rump area compared to controls., [Conclusions] The results suggest that wing-clipped individuals could have endured higher energy expenditure as they lost body mass. Despite the small sample size, the difference in plumage redness between the two experimental groups would support the hypothesis that the flying metabolism may influence the redox enzymatic reactions required for converting yellow dietary carotenoids to red ketocarotenoids.
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- 2022
33. Male aggressiveness during the female fertile phase in relation to extra-pair paternity, plumage ornaments and female traits
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Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Beccari, Matteo, Plaza Cusine, Mireia, Moreno Klemming, Juan, Cantarero, Alejandro, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Beccari, Matteo, Plaza Cusine, Mireia, Moreno Klemming, Juan, and Cantarero, Alejandro
- Abstract
[EN] In many bird species, physical aggression between males become more frequent during the female’s fertile period, as female encounters with extra-pair males are more frequent and can entail paternity losses. Male aggressiveness during this stage has been proposed as crucial for ensuring male reproductive success. Thus, plumage ornaments could represent honest signals of individual quality that could reflect the aggressiveness of paired territorial males. Furthermore, male aggressiveness could be related to mate quality or defensive capacity. We quantified extra-pair paternity in the broods and investigated the association of male and female traits with the aggressive behaviour of territorial paired males in a Spanish population of Pied Flycatchers (Ficedula hypoleuca), where territorial intrusions were simulated during the female fertile period by placing a taxidermic male mount close to the nest. We predicted that (1) more aggressive males should better protect their mates from intruding males and thereby reduce their paternity losses, (2) males with larger white patches and higher UV reflectance of wing patches should respond more strongly to intrusions, and (3) that males should be more aggressive when mated with higher quality females. We found evidence that males that responded less intensely to a territorial intrusion suffered a higher paternity loss, which offers strong support to the basic tenet of the theory of territoriality as paternity defence. Moreover, both the level of male aggressiveness and control of the territory increased with male UV reflectance of wing patches. Finally, we found, contrary to our prediction, that males were less aggressive when mated with more ornamented females., [GER] Bei vielen Vogelarten nimmt die Häufigkeit physischer Aggression zwischen Männchen während der fertilen Phase der Weibchen zu, wenn Zusammentreffen der Weibchen mit fremden Männchen häufiger sind und zu Vaterschaftsverlusten führen können. Die Aggressivität der Männchen in diesem Stadium gilt als entscheidend für die Sicherung ihres Fortpflanzungserfolgs. Somit könnten Gefiederornamente ehrliche Signale individueller Qualität darstellen, welche die Aggressivität verpaarter Reviermännchen widerspiegeln. Außerdem könnte die männliche Aggressivität in Verbindung mit der Qualität der Partnerin oder den Verteidigungsfähigkeiten stehen. An einer spanischen Population von Trauerschnäppern Ficedula hypoleuca bestimmten wir den Anteil von Fremdvaterschaften an den Bruten und untersuchten den Zusammenhang männlicher und weiblicher Merkmale mit dem Aggressionsverhalten verpaarter Reviermännchen, indem wir während der fertilen Phase der Weibchen durch Platzieren eines präparierten Trauerschnäppermännchens in Nestnähe eine Übertretung der Reviergrenze simulierten. Wir sagten vorher, dass: 1) aggressivere Männchen ihre Partnerinnen besser vor Eindringlingen beschützen und so ihre Vaterschaftsverluste reduzieren; 2) Männchen mit größeren weißen Flecken und stärkerer UV-Reflexion der Flügelfelder stärker auf Eindringlinge reagieren und dass 3) mit Weibchen höherer Qualität verpaarte Männchen aggressiver sind. Wir fanden Belege dafür, dass Männchen, welche schwächer auf eine Überschreitung der Reviergrenze reagierten, höhere Vaterschaftsverluste zu tragen hatten, was eine klare Bestätigung der Grundsatzthese ist, dass Territorialität der Vaterschaftsverteidigung dient. Außerdem nahmen sowohl die männliche Aggressivität als auch die Kontrolle über das Revier in Abhängigkeit von der UV-Reflexion der Flügelfelder bei den Männchen zu. Zu guter Letzt stellte sich entgegen unserer Erwartungen heraus, dass Männchen weniger aggressiv waren, wenn sie mit stärker ornamentierten Weibchen
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- 2022
34. Wild common crossbills produce redder feathers when experimentally forced to increase flying effort
- Author
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Cantarero, Alejandro, Fernández-Eslava, Blanca, Alonso, Daniel, Alonso-Álvarez, Carlos, Cantarero, Alejandro, Fernández-Eslava, Blanca, Alonso, Daniel, and Alonso-Álvarez, Carlos
- Abstract
The animal signaling theory posits that conspicuous colorations exhibited by many animals have evolved as reliable signals of individual quality. Red carotenoid-based ornaments may depend on enzymatic transformations (oxidation) of dietary yellow carotenoids, which could occur in the inner mitochondrial membrane (IMM). Thus, carotenoid ketolation and cell respiration could share the same biochemical pathways. Accordingly, the level of trait expression (redness) would directly reveal the efficiency of individuals¿ metabolism and, hence, the bearer quality in an unfalsifiable way. Different avian studies have described that the flying effort may induce oxidative stress. A redox metabolism modified during the flight could thus influence the carotenoid conversion rate and, ultimately, animal coloration. Here, we aimed to infer the link between red carotenoid-based ornament expression and flight metabolism by increasing flying effort in wild male common crossbills Loxia curvirostra (Linnaeus). In this order, 295 adult males were captured with mist nets in an Iberian population during winter. Approximately half of the birds were experimentally handicapped through wing feather clipping to increase their flying effort, the other half being used as a control group. To stimulate the plumage regrown of a small surface during a short time-lapse, we also plucked the rump feathers from all the birds. A fraction of the birds with fully grown rump feathers (34 individuals) could be recaptured during the subsequent weeks. We did not detect any significant bias in recovery rates and morphological variables in this reduced subsample. However, among recaptured birds, individuals with experimentally impaired flying capacity showed body mass loss, whereas controls showed a trend to increase their weight. Moreover, clipped males showed redder feathers in the newly regrown rump area compared to controls. The results suggest that wing-clipped individuals could have endured higher energy exp
- Published
- 2022
35. Los piquituertos comunes macho produjeron plumas más rojas cuando se aumentó su esfuerzo de vuelo
- Author
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Alonso-Álvarez, Carlos, Fernández-Eslava, Blanca, Cantarero, Alejandro, Alonso, Daniel, Alonso-Álvarez, Carlos, Fernández-Eslava, Blanca, Cantarero, Alejandro, and Alonso, Daniel
- Abstract
La teoría evolutiva de la señalización en animales propone que ciertas coloraciones llamativas pueden haber evolucionado para actuar como señales fiables de la calidad del individuo. Las coloraciones rojas producidas por pigmentos carotenoides pueden depender de transformaciones enzimáticas (oxidaciones) de los carotenoides amarillos obtenidos con la dieta, lo cual parece ocurrir dentro de la membrana mitocondrial. De ese modo, la transformación de los pigmentos y la respiración celular (producida en la mitocondria) podrían compartir un mismo mecanismo bioquímico. Tal coincidencia haría que la intensidad de coloración roja reflejara directamente la eficacia metabólica de cada animal y, por tanto, la calidad del mismo de una manera general e infalsificable. Varios trabajos han descrito que el esfuerzo de vuelo puede producir estrés oxidativo. Un metabolismo oxidativo modificado durante el vuelo podría influenciar la transformación de carotenoides y, en último término, la coloración del individuo. Nosotros intentamos inferir la relación entre la expresión de ornamentos pigmentados por carotenoides rojos y el metabolismo del vuelo mediante un experimento en piquituertos comunes (Loxia curvirostra). Se capturaron para ello 295 machos adultos con redes japonesas en una población Ibérica. Esto se hizo durante el invierno ya que es el periodo en el que más piquituertos pueden ser capturados. Aproximadamente, a la mitad de ellos se les recortó dos plumas primarias de cada ala con la intención de aumentar su esfuerzo de vuelo, y la otra mitad fue dejada como control. Para estimular el crecimiento de plumas en una superficie pequeña durante un periodo corto de tiempo y en invierno-primavera, se desplumó un área del obispillo de todas las aves. Durante las siguientes semanas pudimos capturar 34 de estos individuos. No detectamos sesgos en la tasa de recuperación de cada grupo experimental, ni diferencias morfológicas entre ambos. Sin embargo, entre los recapturados, aquellos c
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- 2022
36. Wild common crossbills produce redder body feathers when experimentally forced to increase flying effort
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Cantarero, Alejandro, Fernández-Eslava, Blanca, Alonso, Daniel, Alonso Álvarez, Carlos, Cantarero, Alejandro, Fernández-Eslava, Blanca, Alonso, Daniel, and Alonso Álvarez, Carlos
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- 2022
37. Population differences in the length and early-life dynamics of telomeres among European pied flycatchers
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Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Kärkkäinen, Tiia, Laaksonen, Toni, Burgess, Malcolm, Cantarero, Alejandro, Martínez-Padilla, Jesús, Potti, Jaime, Moreno, Juan, Thomson, Robert L., Tilgar, Vallo, Stier, Antoine, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Kärkkäinen, Tiia, Laaksonen, Toni, Burgess, Malcolm, Cantarero, Alejandro, Martínez-Padilla, Jesús, Potti, Jaime, Moreno, Juan, Thomson, Robert L., Tilgar, Vallo, and Stier, Antoine
- Abstract
length and shortening rate are increasingly being used as biomarkers for long-term costs in ecological and evolutionary studies because of their relationships with survival and fitness. Both early-life conditions and growth, and later-life stressors can create variation in telomere shortening rate. Studies on between-population telomere length and dynamics are scarce, despite the expectation that populations exposed to varying environmental constraints would present divergent telomere length patterns. The pied flycatcher (Ficedula hypoleuca) is a passerine bird breeding across Eurasia (from Spain to western Siberia) and migrating through the Iberian Peninsula to spend the nonbreeding period in sub-Saharan Africa. Thus, different populations show marked differences in migration distance. We studied the large-scale variation of telomere length and early-life dynamics in the pied flycatcher by comparing six European populations across a north–south gradient (Finland, Estonia, England and Spain) predicting a negative effect of migration distance on adult telomere length, and of nestling growth on nestling telomere dynamics. There were clear population differences in telomere length, with English birds from midlatitudes having the longest telomeres. Telomere length did not thus show consistent latitudinal variation and was not linearly linked to differences in migration distance. Early-life telomere shortening rate tended to vary between populations. Fast growth was associated with shorter telomeres in the early life, but faster nestling growth affected telomeres more negatively in northern than southern populations. While the sources of between-population differences in telomere-related biology remain to be more intensively studied, our study illustrates the need to expand telomere studies at the between-population level
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- 2022
38. Heterozygosity, genetic similarity and extra‐pair paternity variation in two populations of rock sparrow Petronia petronia : a within and between populations comparison
- Author
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Corregidor‐Castro, Alejandro, primary, Griggio, Matteo, additional, Grapputo, Alessandro, additional, Mingozzi, Toni, additional, Pilastro, Andrea, additional, Plaza, Mireia, additional, and Cantarero, Alejandro, additional
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Additional file 2 of Wild common crossbills produce redder body feathers when their wings are clipped
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Fernández-Eslava, Blanca, Cantarero, Alejandro, Alonso, Daniel, and Alonso-Alvarez, Carlos
- Abstract
Additional file 2.
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. An experimental increase in female mass during the fertile phaseleads to higher levels of extra-pair paternity in pied flycatchersFicedula hypoleuca
- Author
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Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Fundación Ramón Areces, Plaza, Mireia [0000-0001-7847-2081], Cantarero, Alejandro [0000-0002-5816-701X], Moreno, Juan [0000-0003-1508-7295], Plaza Cusine, Mireia, Cantarero, Alejandro, Moreno, Juan, Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Fundación Ramón Areces, Plaza, Mireia [0000-0001-7847-2081], Cantarero, Alejandro [0000-0002-5816-701X], Moreno, Juan [0000-0003-1508-7295], Plaza Cusine, Mireia, Cantarero, Alejandro, and Moreno, Juan
- Abstract
Female mass in most altricial birds reaches its maximum during breeding at egg laying, which coincides temporally with thefertile phase when extra-pair paternity (EPP) is determined. Higher mass at laying may have two different effects on EPPintensity. On the one hand, it would lead to increased wing loading (body mass/wing area), which may impair flight efficiencyand thereby reduce female’s capacity to resist unwanted extra-pair male approaches (sexual conflict hypothesis). On the otherhand, it would enhance female condition, favouring her capacity to evade mate guarding and to search for extra-pair mates(female choice hypothesis). In both cases, higher female mass at laying may lead to enhanced EPP. To test this prediction, wereduced nest building effort by adding a completely constructed nest in an experimental group of female pied flycatchers(Ficedula hypoleuca). Our treatment caused an increase in mass and thereby wing loading and this was translated into asignificantly higher EPP in the manipulated group compared with the control group as expected. There was also a significantnegative relationship between EPP and laying date and the extent of the white wing patch, an index of female dominance. Morebody reserves at laying mean not only a higher potential fecundity but a higher level of EPP as well. This interaction had notpreviously received due attention but should be considered in future studies of avian breeding strategies.
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- 2019
41. Connecting the data landscape of long-term ecological studies: The SPI-Birds data hub
- Author
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Culina, Antica, Adriaensen, Frank, Bailey, Liam D., Burgess, Malcolm D., Charmantier, Anne, Cole, Ella F., Eeva, Tapio, Matthysen, Erik, Nater, Chloé R., Sheldon, Ben C., Sæther, Bernt Erik, Vriend, Stefan J.G., Zajkova, Zuzana, Adamík, Peter, Aplin, Lucy M., Angulo, Elena, Artemyev, Alexandr, Barba, Emilio, Barišić, Sanja, Belda, Eduardo, Bilgin, Cemal Can, Bleu, Josefa, Both, Christiaan, Bouwhuis, Sandra, Branston, Claire J., Broggi, Juli, Burke, Terry, Bushuev, Andrey, Camacho, Carlos, Campobello, Daniela, Canal, David, Cantarero, Alejandro, Caro, Samuel P., Cauchoix, Maxime, Chaine, Alexis, Cichoń, Mariusz, Ćiković, Davor, Cusimano, Camillo A., Deimel, Caroline, Dhondt, André A., Dingemanse, Niels J., Doligez, Blandine, Dominoni, Davide M., Doutrelant, Claire, Drobniak, Szymon M., Dubiec, Anna, Eens, Marcel, Einar Erikstad, Kjell, Espín, Silvia, Farine, Damien R., Figuerola, Jordi, Kavak Gülbeyaz, Pınar, Grégoire, Arnaud, Hartley, Ian R., Hau, Michaela, Hegyi, Gergely, Hille, Sabine, Hinde, Camilla A., Holtmann, Benedikt, Ilyina, Tatyana, Isaksson, Caroline, Iserbyt, Arne, Ivankina, Elena, Kania, Wojciech, Kempenaers, Bart, Kerimov, Anvar, Komdeur, Jan, Korsten, Peter, Král, Miroslav, Krist, Miloš, Lambrechts, Marcel, Lara, Carlos E., Leivits, Agu, Liker, András, Lodjak, Jaanis, Mägi, Marko, Mainwaring, Mark C., Mänd, Raivo, Massa, Bruno, Massemin, Sylvie, Martínez-Padilla, Jesús, Mazgajski, Tomasz D., Mennerat, Adèle, Moreno, Juan, Mouchet, Alexia, Nakagawa, Shinichi, Nilsson, Jan Åke, Nilsson, Johan F., Cláudia Norte, Ana, van Oers, Kees, Orell, Markku, Potti, Jaime, Quinn, John L., Réale, Denis, Kristin Reiertsen, Tone, Rosivall, Balázs, Russell, Andrew F., Rytkönen, Seppo, Sánchez-Virosta, Pablo, Santos, Eduardo S.A., Schroeder, Julia, Senar, Juan Carlos, Seress, Gábor, Slagsvold, Tore, Szulkin, Marta, Teplitsky, Céline, Tilgar, Vallo, Tolstoguzov, Andrey, Török, János, Valcu, Mihai, Vatka, Emma, Verhulst, Simon, Watson, Hannah, Yuta, Teru, Zamora-Marín, José M., Visser, Marcel E., Culina, Antica, Adriaensen, Frank, Bailey, Liam D., Burgess, Malcolm D., Charmantier, Anne, Cole, Ella F., Eeva, Tapio, Matthysen, Erik, Nater, Chloé R., Sheldon, Ben C., Sæther, Bernt Erik, Vriend, Stefan J.G., Zajkova, Zuzana, Adamík, Peter, Aplin, Lucy M., Angulo, Elena, Artemyev, Alexandr, Barba, Emilio, Barišić, Sanja, Belda, Eduardo, Bilgin, Cemal Can, Bleu, Josefa, Both, Christiaan, Bouwhuis, Sandra, Branston, Claire J., Broggi, Juli, Burke, Terry, Bushuev, Andrey, Camacho, Carlos, Campobello, Daniela, Canal, David, Cantarero, Alejandro, Caro, Samuel P., Cauchoix, Maxime, Chaine, Alexis, Cichoń, Mariusz, Ćiković, Davor, Cusimano, Camillo A., Deimel, Caroline, Dhondt, André A., Dingemanse, Niels J., Doligez, Blandine, Dominoni, Davide M., Doutrelant, Claire, Drobniak, Szymon M., Dubiec, Anna, Eens, Marcel, Einar Erikstad, Kjell, Espín, Silvia, Farine, Damien R., Figuerola, Jordi, Kavak Gülbeyaz, Pınar, Grégoire, Arnaud, Hartley, Ian R., Hau, Michaela, Hegyi, Gergely, Hille, Sabine, Hinde, Camilla A., Holtmann, Benedikt, Ilyina, Tatyana, Isaksson, Caroline, Iserbyt, Arne, Ivankina, Elena, Kania, Wojciech, Kempenaers, Bart, Kerimov, Anvar, Komdeur, Jan, Korsten, Peter, Král, Miroslav, Krist, Miloš, Lambrechts, Marcel, Lara, Carlos E., Leivits, Agu, Liker, András, Lodjak, Jaanis, Mägi, Marko, Mainwaring, Mark C., Mänd, Raivo, Massa, Bruno, Massemin, Sylvie, Martínez-Padilla, Jesús, Mazgajski, Tomasz D., Mennerat, Adèle, Moreno, Juan, Mouchet, Alexia, Nakagawa, Shinichi, Nilsson, Jan Åke, Nilsson, Johan F., Cláudia Norte, Ana, van Oers, Kees, Orell, Markku, Potti, Jaime, Quinn, John L., Réale, Denis, Kristin Reiertsen, Tone, Rosivall, Balázs, Russell, Andrew F., Rytkönen, Seppo, Sánchez-Virosta, Pablo, Santos, Eduardo S.A., Schroeder, Julia, Senar, Juan Carlos, Seress, Gábor, Slagsvold, Tore, Szulkin, Marta, Teplitsky, Céline, Tilgar, Vallo, Tolstoguzov, Andrey, Török, János, Valcu, Mihai, Vatka, Emma, Verhulst, Simon, Watson, Hannah, Yuta, Teru, Zamora-Marín, José M., and Visser, Marcel E.
- Abstract
The integration and synthesis of the data in different areas of science is drastically slowed and hindered by a lack of standards and networking programmes. Long‐term studies of individually marked animals are not an exception. These studies are especially important as instrumental for understanding evolutionary and ecological processes in the wild. Furthermore, their number and global distribution provides a unique opportunity to assess the generality of patterns and to address broad‐scale global issues (e.g. climate change). To solve data integration issues and enable a new scale of ecological and evolutionary research based on long‐term studies of birds, we have created the SPI‐Birds Network and Database (www.spibirds.org)—a large‐scale initiative that connects data from, and researchers working on, studies of wild populations of individually recognizable (usually ringed) birds. Within year and a half since the establishment, SPI‐Birds has recruited over 120 members, and currently hosts data on almost 1.5 million individual birds collected in 80 populations over 2,000 cumulative years, and counting. SPI‐Birds acts as a data hub and a catalogue of studied populations. It prevents data loss, secures easy data finding, use and integration and thus facilitates collaboration and synthesis. We provide community‐derived data and meta‐data standards and improve data integrity guided by the principles of Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Reusable (FAIR), and aligned with the existing metadata languages (e.g. ecological meta‐data language). The encouraging community involvement stems from SPI‐Bird's decentralized approach: research groups retain full control over data use and their way of data management, while SPI‐Birds creates tailored pipelines to convert each unique data format into a standard format. We outline the lessons learned, so that other communities (e.g. those working on other taxa) can adapt our successful model. Creating community‐speci
- Published
- 2021
42. Nestling sex ratio is associated with both male and female attractiveness in rock sparrows [Dataset]
- Author
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Cantarero, Alejandro (alex.cantarero@hotmail.com), Cantarero, Alejandro, Pilastro, Andrea, Griggio, Matteo, Cantarero, Alejandro (alex.cantarero@hotmail.com), Cantarero, Alejandro, Pilastro, Andrea, and Griggio, Matteo
- Abstract
Dataset of the scientific article "Nestling sex ratio is associated with both male and female attractiveness in rock sparrows"
- Published
- 2018
43. Connected data landscape of long-term ecological studies: the SPI-Birds data hub
- Author
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Adriaensen, Frank, Visser, Marcel, Branston, Claire, Drobniak, Szymon, Sánchez-Virosta, Pablo, Bailey, Liam, Figuerola, Jordi, Aplin, Lucy, Kania, Wojciech, Sæther, Bernt-Erik, Chaine, Alexis, Komdeur, Jan, Cantarero, Alejandro, Burke, Terry, Török, János, Szulkin, Marta, Gülbeyaz, Pınar, Liker, Andras, Zamora-Marín, José, Bouwhuis, Sandra, Tilgar, Vallo, Massemin, Sylvie, Mägi, Marko, Dominoni, Davide, Doligez, Blandine, Rytkönen, Seppo, Dingemanse, Niels, Nilsson, Johan, Eens, Marcel, Krist, Miloš, Norte, Ana, Bushuev, Andrey, Barišić, Sanja, Both, Christiaan, Cole, Ella, Valcu, Mihai, Reiertsen, Tone, Teplitsky, Celine, Senar, Juan, Holtmann, Benedikt, Hille, Sabine, Seress, Gábor, Santos, Eduardo, Hinde, Camilla, REALE, Denis, Hartley, Ian, Ilyina, Tatyana, Orell, Markku, Broggi, Juli, Nater, Chloé, Hau, Michaela, Grégoire, Arnaud, Rosivall, Balázs, Culina, Antica, Leivits, Agu, Lodjak, Jaanis, Erikstad, Kjell, Eeva, Tapio, Lara, Carlos, Bilgin, C., Farine, Damien, Yuta, Teru, Russel, Andrew, Mennerat, Adele, Sheldon, Benjamin, Cichoń, Mariusz, Potti, Jaime, Camacho, Carlos, Hegyi, Gergely, Cusimano, Camillo, Mainwaring, Mark, Dhondt, André, Moreno, Juan, Ćiković, Davor, Korsten, Peter, Slagsvold, Tore, Mazgajski, Tomasz, Kerimov, Anvar, Lambrechts, Marcel, Nilsson, Jan-Åke, Barba, Emilio, Espín, Silvia, Watson, Hannah, Verhulst, Simon, Caro, Samuel, Nakagawa, Shinichi, Canal, David, Belda, Eduardo, Bleu, Josefa, Mouchet, Alexia, Charmantier, Anne, Mänd, Raivo, Vatka, Emma, Doutrelant, Claire, Angulo, Elena, Quinn, John, Burgess, Malcolm, Adamík, Peter, Martínez-Padilla, Jesús, Vriend, Stefan, Iserbyt, Arne, Tolstoguzov, Andrey, Isaksson, Caroline, Král, Miroslav, van Oers, Kees, Deimel, Caroline, Artemyev, Alexandr, Dubiec, Anna, Campobello, Daniela, Kempenaers, Bart, Massa, Bruno, Matthysen, Erik, Ivankina, Elena, Cauchoix, Maxime, and Schroeder, Julia
- Subjects
bepress|Life Sciences ,bepress|Life Sciences|Ecology and Evolutionary Biology - Abstract
The integration and synthesis of the data in different areas of science is drastically slowed and hindered by a lack of standards and networking programmes. Long-term studies of individually marked animals are not an exception. These studies are especially important as instrumental for understanding evolutionary and ecological processes in the wild. Further, their number and global distribution provides a unique opportunity to assess the generality of patterns and to address broad-scale global issues (e.g. climate change). To solve data integration issues and enable a new scale of ecological and evolutionary research based on long-terms studies of birds, we have created the SPI-Birds Network and Database (www.spibirds.org) – a large-scale initiative that connects data from, and researchers working on, studies of wild populations of individually recognizable (usually ringed) birds. Within a year of the establishment, SPI-Birds counts 120 members working on more than 80 populations, with data concerning breeding attempts of almost a million individual birds over a 1700 cumulative years, and counting. SPI-Birds acts as a data hub and a catalogue of studied populations. It prevents data loss, secures easy data finding, use and integration, and thus facilitates collaboration and synthesis. We provide community-derived data and meta-data standards and improve data integrity guided by of Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable (FAIR), and aligned with the existing metadata languages (e.g. ecological meta-data language). The encouraging community involvement stems from SPI-Bird's decentralized approach: research groups retain full control over data use and their way of data management, while SPI-Birds creates tailored pipelines to convert each unique data format into a standard format. We outline the lessons learned, so that other communities (e.g. those working on other taxa) can adapt our successful model. Creating community-specific hubs (such as ours, COMADRE for animal demography, etc.) will aid much-needed large-scale ecological data integration.
- Published
- 2020
44. Supplementary methods and analyses from Testing the carotenoid-based sexual signalling mechanism by altering CYP2J19 gene expression and colour in a bird species
- Author
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Cantarero, Alejandro, Andrade, Pedro, Carneiro, Miguel, Moreno-Borrallo, Adrián, and Alonso-Alvarez, Carlos
- Abstract
Additional methods and complementary analyses, tables and figures
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Testing the carotenoid-based sexual signalling mechanism by altering CYP2J19 gene expression and colour in a bird species
- Author
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Fundación Ramón Areces, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Cantarero, Alejandro, Andrade, Pedro, Carneiro, Miguel, Moreno-Borralbo, Adrián, Alonso-Álvarez, Carlos, Fundación Ramón Areces, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Cantarero, Alejandro, Andrade, Pedro, Carneiro, Miguel, Moreno-Borralbo, Adrián, and Alonso-Álvarez, Carlos
- Abstract
Ornaments can evolve to reveal individual quality when their production/maintenance costs make them reliable as signals or if their expression level is intrinsically linked to condition by some unfalsifiable mechanism (indices). The latter has been mostly associated with traits constrained by body size. In red ketocarotenoid-based colourations, that link could, instead, be established with cell respiration at the inner mitochondrial membrane (IMM). The production mechanism could be independent of resource (yellow carotenoids) availability, thus discarding costs linked to allocation trade-offs. A gene coding for a ketolase enzyme (CYP2J19) responsible for converting dietary yellow carotenoids to red ketocarotenoids has recently been described. We treated male zebra finches with an antioxidant designed to penetrate the IMM (mitoTEMPO) and a thyroid hormone (triiodothyronine) with known hypermetabolic effects. Among hormone controls, MitoTEMPO downregulated CYP2J19 in the bill (a red ketocarotenoidbased ornament), supporting the mitochondrial involvement in ketolase function. Both treatments interacted when increasing hormone dosage, indicating that mitochondria and thyroid metabolisms could simultaneously regulate colouration. Moreover, CYP2J19 expression was positively correlated to redness but also to yellow carotenoid levels in the blood. However, treatment effects were not annulated when controlling for blood carotenoid variability, which suggests that costs linked to resource availability could be minor.
- Published
- 2020
46. Testing the shared‐pathway hypothesis in the carotenoid‐based coloration of red crossbills
- Author
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Fundación Ramón Areces, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), Cantarero, Alejandro, Mateo, Rafael, Camarero, Pablo R., Alonso, Daniel, Fernandez‐Eslava, Blanca, Alonso-Álvarez, Carlos, Fundación Ramón Areces, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), Cantarero, Alejandro, Mateo, Rafael, Camarero, Pablo R., Alonso, Daniel, Fernandez‐Eslava, Blanca, and Alonso-Álvarez, Carlos
- Abstract
The mechanisms involved in the production of red carotenoid‐based ornaments of vertebrates are still poorly understood. These colorations often depend on enzymatic transformations (ketolation) of dietary yellow carotenoids, which could occur in the inner mitochondrial membrane (IMM). Thus, carotenoid ketolation and cell respiration could share biochemical pathways, favoring the evolution of ketocarotenoid‐based ornaments as reliable indices of individual quality under sexual selection. Captive male red crossbills (Loxia curvirostra Linnaeus) were exposed to redox‐active compounds designed to penetrate and act in the IMM: an ubiquinone (mitoQ) or a superoxide dismutase mimetic (mitoTEMPO). MitoQ can act as an antioxidant but also distort the IMM structure, increasing mitochondrial free radical production. MitoQ decreased yellow carotenoids and tocopherol levels in blood, perhaps by being consumed as antioxidants. Contrarily, mitoTEMPO‐treated birds rose circulating levels of the second most abundant ketocarotenoid in crossbills (i.e., canthaxanthin). It also increased feather total red ketocarotenoid concentration and redness, but only among those birds exhibiting a redder plumage at the start of the study, that is, supposedly high‐quality individuals. The fact that mitoTEMPO effects depended on original plumage color suggests that the red‐ketocarotenoid‐based ornaments indicate individual quality as mitochondrial function efficiency. The findings would thus support the shared pathway hypothesis.
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- 2020
47. Life-long testosterone and antiandrogen treatments affect the survival and reproduction of captive male red-legged partridges (Alectoris rufa)
- Author
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Turku University Central Hospital, University of Turku, Junta de Comunidades de Castilla-La Mancha, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Universidad de Castilla La Mancha, European Commission, Ministerio de Economía, Industria y Competitividad (España), Fundación Ramón Areces, Alonso-Álvarez, Carlos, Cantarero, Alejandro, Romero-Haro, Ana A., Chastel, Olivier, Pérez-Rodríguez, Lorenzo, Turku University Central Hospital, University of Turku, Junta de Comunidades de Castilla-La Mancha, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Universidad de Castilla La Mancha, European Commission, Ministerio de Economía, Industria y Competitividad (España), Fundación Ramón Areces, Alonso-Álvarez, Carlos, Cantarero, Alejandro, Romero-Haro, Ana A., Chastel, Olivier, and Pérez-Rodríguez, Lorenzo
- Abstract
Sexual steroids can play an important role as life-history organizers. In males, high circulating testosterone levels induce physiological/behavioral costs and benefits, leading to trade-offs. However, studies simultaneously testing the impact of these levels in both fitness components (survival and fecundity) during lifetime are scarce and limited to wild birds. To determine the mortality causes or hormonal manipulation impacts on male fertility is, nonetheless, a difficult task in free-ranging animals that could be easier in captivity. We longitudinally monitored captive red-legged partridges (Alectoris rufa) and exposed males to high exogenous testosterone levels, anti-androgens, or a control treatment during each breeding period throughout their lives. Theory predicts that individuals maintaining high androgen levels should obtain higher fitness returns via reproduction, but suffer reduced longevity. Testosterone-treated male partridges, accordingly, lived shorter compared to controls, since they were more prone to die from a natural bacterial infection. However, the same birds seemed to have a lower capacity to fertilize eggs, probably due to endocrine feedback reducing testicular mass. These results show that exogenous testosterone can exert unpredicted effects on fitness parameters. Therefore, caution must be taken when drawing conclusions from non-fully controlled experiments in the wild. Males treated with the androgen-receptor blocker flutamide did not outlive controls as predicted by the life-history trade-off theory, but their mates laid eggs with higher hatching success. The latter could be due to mechanisms improving sperm quality/quantity or influencing maternal investment in egg quality. Testosterone receptor activity/amount could thus be as relevant to fitness as testosterone levels.
- Published
- 2020
48. Experimental increase in female mass during the fertile phase leads to enhanced extra-pair paternity in pied flycatchers Ficedula hypoleuca
- Author
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Plaza, Mireia, Cantarero, Alejandro, and Moreno, Juan
- Subjects
bepress|Life Sciences ,bepress|Life Sciences|Genetics and Genomics ,bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences ,bepress|Life Sciences|Genetics and Genomics|Genetics ,bepress|Life Sciences|Ecology and Evolutionary Biology|Behavior and Ethology ,bepress|Life Sciences|Ecology and Evolutionary Biology ,bepress|Life Sciences|Ecology and Evolutionary Biology|Evolution - Abstract
Female mass in most altricial birds reaches its maximum during breeding at egg-laying, which coincides temporally with the fertile phase when extra-pair paternity (EPP) is determined. Higher mass at laying may have two different effects on EPP intensity. On the one hand, it would lead to increased wing loading (body mass/wing area), which may impair flight efficiency and thereby reduce female’s capacity to resist unwanted extra-pair male approaches (sexual conflict hypothesis). On the other hand, it would enhance female condition, favouring her capacity to evade mate-guarding and to search for extra-pair mates (female choice hypothesis). In both cases, higher female mass at laying may lead to enhanced EPP. To test this prediction, we reduced nest building effort by adding a completely constructed nest in an experimental group of female pied flycatchers (Ficedula hypoleuca). Our treatment caused an increase in mass and thereby wing loading and this was translated into a significantly higher EPP in the manipulated group compared with the control group as expected. There was also a significant negative relationship between EPP and laying date and the extent of the white wing patch, an index of female dominance. More body reserves at laying mean not only a higher potential fecundity but a higher level of EPP as well. This interaction had not previously received due attention but should be considered in future studies of avian breeding strategies.
- Published
- 2019
49. La coloración basada en carotenoides predice la longevidad y la fecundidad de los machos de perdiz roja, pero la testosterona altera la fiabilidad de la señal
- Author
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Cantarero, Alejandro, Pérez-Rodríguez, Lorenzo, Romero-Haro, Ana A., and Alonso-Álvarez, Carlos
- Abstract
Resumen del trabajo presentado al I Congreso Ibérico de Ciencia Aplicada a los Recursos Cinegéticos (CICARC), celebrado en Ciudad Real (España) del 1 al 4 de julio de 2019., En los animales, la selección sexual promueve la evolución de ornamentos como las coloraciones llamativas de ciertas zonas del cuerpo. Para evolucionar como señales ‐y por tanto alterar el comportamiento del receptor‐ estos rasgos deben informar de manera fiable sobre la calidad del portador, vinculándose con su eficacia biológica. La mayoría de las medidas directas de eficacia biológica incluyen tanto la longevidad como la fecundidad. Sin embargo, hay pocas evidencias empíricas de la existencia de una correlación entre el nivel de expresión de la señal y ambos componentes de la eficacia biológica en vertebrados. Aquí mostramos cómo, en machos de perdiz roja (Alectoris rufa) en cautividad, la intensidad de la coloración roja del pico y los anillos perioculares al comienzo de la vida reproductiva predicen tanto la longevidad (1‐7 años) como el éxito reproductivo (número de pollos y éxito de eclosión) a lo largo de la vida. Dicha coloración obedece al depósito de pigmentos carotenoides rojos, obtenidos mediante la oxidación enzimática de carotenoides amarillos adquiridos con la dieta. Dicho proceso parece estar conectado con la respiración celular, asociada a su vez con el envejecimiento. Esto podría explicar por qué la intensidad de color predijo la esperanza de vida e, indirectamente, la fecundidad. Es decir, los machos más rojos gozaban de un metabolismo más saludable. No obstante, en los machos, esta coloración basada en carotenoides está parcialmente controlada por los niveles sanguineos de testosterona. Cuando manipulamos la actividad androgénica mediante implantes subcutáneos de testosterona o antiandrógenos durante todas las estaciones reproductivas de la vida del animal, las correlaciones entre intensidad de coloración y ambos componentes de la eficacia biológica desaparecieron, suprimiendo, por lo tanto, la fiabilidad de la señal. Nuestros resultados sugieren la necesidad de un metabolismo esteroide perfectemente controlado para permitir la evolución de las señales basadas en carotenoides.
- Published
- 2019
50. Molecular tools from Experimentally flight-impaired females show higher levels of extra-pair paternity in the pied flycatcher Ficedula hypoleuca
- Author
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Plaza, Mireia, Cantarero, Alejandro, Gil, Diego, and Moreno, Juan
- Abstract
Genotyping and paternity assignement method
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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