High frequency of social polygyny reveals little costs for females in a songbird
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Abstract
Mating system theory predicts that social polygyny—when one male forms pair bonds with
two females—may evolve by female choice in species with biparental care. Females will accept
a polygynous male if the beneft of mating with a male providing high-quality genes or rearing
resources outweighs the cost of sharing mate assistance in parental care. Based on this rationale, we
hypothesise that the population frequency of social polygyny (FSP) varies due to changes in mate
sharing costs caused by changing environmental conditions. We predicted that: (1) polygamous
females (i.e. mated with a polygynous male) pay a survival cost compared to monogamous females;
(2) FSP would be higher in years with better rearing conditions and (3) the diference in survival rates
between monogamous and polygamous females would be small following years with higher FSP. We
tested these predictions using regression and multistate analyses of capture-recapture data of pied
fycatchers, Ficedula hypoleuca, in central Spain collected over 26 years (1990–2016). Monogamous
females had a higher mean survival rate than polygamous females (prediction 1), but there was no
diference in survival between polygynous and monogamous males. In addition, FSP was positively
associated with annual reproductive success (a proxy of the quality of rearing conditions—prediction
2). Finally, following years with high FSP, the survival of polygamous females was similar to that of
monogamous females (prediction 3), while the chance of breeding in a polygamous state for 2 years
in a row increased for both males and females. Our fndings suggest that fuctuating environmental
conditions may be a necessary but neglected aspect of understanding social polygyny mechanisms
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Bibliographic citation
Santoro, S., Fernández-Díaz, P., Canal, D., Camacho, C., Garamszegi, L. Z., Martínez-Padilla, J., & Potti, J. (2022). High frequency of social polygyny reveals little costs for females in a songbird. In Scientific Reports (Vol. 12, Issue 1). Springer Science and Business Media LLC. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-04423-0







