Date: November 8, 2016
Source: University of Oxford
Chicks that are competing with siblings or whose parents are
likely to die or switch partners tend to be less honest when begging for food, research
into sibling rivalry in birds by Oxford University scientists has found.
That's because these events introduce conflict into the family
group.
Analysis of more than 100 studies across 60 species of bird
also found that chicks are more likely to exaggerate their need for food if
their parents are likely to breed again in the future -- backing up existing
evolutionary theory about natural selection.
The results are published in the journal PNAS.
Co-author Shana Caro, a doctoral candidate in Oxford's Department
of Zoology, said: 'We hypothesised that you could explain the relative levels
of honesty among chicks across species based on how much conflict exists. A
chick that has the nest to itself is always going to get the worm, but if you
add other chicks then there is going to be conflict over food resources.
'We wanted to see whether dishonesty increases as the number
of siblings sharing a nest increases.'
The researchers mathematically analysed 108 scientific studies
featuring information relating to the begging behaviour of chicks across 60
species. They took into account factors such as birds' condition, number of
siblings, and relatedness to siblings.
Shana Caro said: 'We found that offspring are less honest
about their need for food when they face competition from current siblings,
when their parents are likely to breed again, and when parental divorce or
death means any future siblings can only be half, not full, siblings. In short,
anything that brings in conflict is detrimental to honesty. Over millions of
years, natural selection has caused species with higher levels of conflict to
evolve chicks that beg for food even when they don't need it.'
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