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Paternal Care Decreases Foraging Activity and Body Condition, but Does Not Impose Survival Costs to Caring Males in a Neotropical Arachnid

Overview of attention for article published in PLOS ONE, October 2012
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Title
Paternal Care Decreases Foraging Activity and Body Condition, but Does Not Impose Survival Costs to Caring Males in a Neotropical Arachnid
Published in
PLOS ONE, October 2012
DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0046701
Pubmed ID
Authors

Gustavo S. Requena, Bruno A. Buzatto, Eduardo G. Martins, Glauco Machado

Abstract

Exclusive paternal care is the rarest form of parental investment in nature and theory predicts that the maintenance of this behavior depends on the balance between costs and benefits to males. Our goal was to assess costs of paternal care in the harvestman Iporangaia pustulosa, for which the benefits of this behavior in terms of egg survival have already been demonstrated. We evaluated energetic costs and mortality risks associated to paternal egg-guarding in the field. We quantified foraging activity of males and estimated how their body condition is influenced by the duration of the caring period. Additionally, we conducted a one-year capture-mark-recapture study and estimated apparent survival probabilities of caring and non-caring males to assess potential survival costs of paternal care. Our results indicate that caring males forage less frequently than non-caring individuals (males and females) and that their body condition deteriorates over the course of the caring period. Thus, males willing to guard eggs may provide to females a fitness-enhancing gift of cost-free care of their offspring. Caring males, however, did not show lower survival probabilities when compared to both non-caring males and females. Reduction in mortality risks as a result of remaining stationary, combined with the benefits of improving egg survival, may have played an important and previously unsuspected role favoring the evolution of paternal care. Moreover, males exhibiting paternal care could also provide an honest signal of their quality as offspring defenders, and thus female preference for caring males could be responsible for maintaining the trait.

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Geographical breakdown

Country Count As %
Brazil 4 6%
Australia 1 1%
Mexico 1 1%
Japan 1 1%
United States 1 1%
Unknown 63 89%

Demographic breakdown

Readers by professional status Count As %
Student > Ph. D. Student 12 17%
Student > Master 11 15%
Researcher 10 14%
Student > Bachelor 7 10%
Professor 6 8%
Other 13 18%
Unknown 12 17%
Readers by discipline Count As %
Agricultural and Biological Sciences 45 63%
Environmental Science 6 8%
Arts and Humanities 1 1%
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology 1 1%
Unspecified 1 1%
Other 2 3%
Unknown 15 21%