Skip to main content
Log in

Biochemical determination of parental uncertainty in white-fronted bee-eaters

  • Published:
Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Summary

Maternity and paternity uncertainty represent important costs to breeders among white-fronted bee-eaters (Merops bullockoides) in Kenya. Analysis of enzyme polymorphisms reveals that between 9% and 12% of all offspring are genetically unrelated to one or both of their putative parents. These ‘bastards’ are the result of three different sources of parental uncertainty: Extrapair copulation, intraspecific egg parasitism, and quasi-parasitism (parasitism by a female who was fertilized by the male attending the parasitized nest). The first two represent costs to males, who rear offspring that are not genetically their own; the latter two produce the same costs for females. Genetic relatedness plays an important role in defining the social structure of M. bullockoides populations. In order to predict patterns of parental investment and the choice of recipients for helping behavior, one would like to know the relative frequency of maternity vs paternity uncertainty. The possible use of maximum likelihood techniques to separate the sources of non-kin is discussed. Unfortunately, the sample size of detected non-kin in the present study was not large enough to allow constructive use of the technique for bee-eaters. A comparison of estimates from biochemical and behavioral analyses indicates that both methods can produce misleading results. Behavioral data can be used to test underlying assumptions of biochemical analyses, and vice-versa. Used together, the two approaches reinforce one another and strengthen the reliability of conclusions drawn from either one alone.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Similar content being viewed by others

References

  • Alexander RD (1974) The evolution of social behavior. Ann Rev Ecol Syst 5:325–383

    Google Scholar 

  • Alexander RD (1979) Darwinism and human affairs. University of Washington Press, Seattle

    Google Scholar 

  • Andersson M (1984) Brood parasitism within species. In: Barnard CJ (ed) Producers and Scroungers: Strategies of exploitation and parasitism. Croom Helm, London, pp 195–227

    Google Scholar 

  • Avala FJ, Hedgecock D, Bumwalt GS, Valentine FW (1973) Genetic variation in Tradacna maxima, an ecological analog of some unsuccessful lineages. Evolution 27:177–191

    Google Scholar 

  • Brown CR (1984) Laying eggs in a neighbor's nest: Benefit and cost of colonial nesting in swallows. Science 224:518–519

    Google Scholar 

  • Cavalli-Sforza LL, Bodmer F (1971) The genetics of human populations. Freeman, San Francisco

    Google Scholar 

  • Clayton JW, Tretiak DN (1972) Amine-citrate buffers for pH control in starch gel electrophoresis. J Fish Res Board Canada 29:1169–1172

    Google Scholar 

  • Emlen ST (1981) Altruism, kinship and reciprocity in the white-fronted bee-eater. In: Alexander RD, Tinkle D (eds) Natural selection and social behavior. Chiron, New York, pp 217–230

    Google Scholar 

  • Emlen ST, Demong NJ (1984) Bee-eaters of Baharini. Nat Hist 10:50–59

    Google Scholar 

  • Emlen ST, Wrege PH (1986) Forced copulations and intra-specific parasitism: Two costs of social living in the white-fronted bee-eater. Ethology 71:2–29

    Google Scholar 

  • Ford NL (1983) Variation in mate fidelity in monogamous birds. In: Johnston RF (ed) Current ornithology, Vol 1, Plenum Press, New York, pp 329–356

    Google Scholar 

  • Gowaty PA (1985) Multiple parentage and apparent monogamy in birds. In: Gowaty PA, Mock DW (eds) Avian Monogamy, Ornithological Monographs, American Ornithologists' Union, pp 11–21

  • Gowaty PA, Karlin AA (1984) Multiple maternity and paternity in single broods of apparently monogamous eastern blue-birds (Sialia sialis). Behav Ecol Sociobiol 15:91–95

    Google Scholar 

  • Harris H, Hopkinson DA (1976) Handbook of enzyme electrophoresis in human genetics. American, Elsevier

    Google Scholar 

  • Hegner RE, Emlen ST, Demong NJ (1982) Spatial organization of the white-fronted bee-eater. Nature 298:264–266

    Google Scholar 

  • Lewontin RC (1974) The genetic basis of evolutionary change. Columbia University Press, New York

    Google Scholar 

  • Marsden JE, May B (1984) Feather pulp: A non-destructive sampling technique for electrophoretic studies of birds. Auk 101:173–175

    Google Scholar 

  • May B, Wright JE, Stoneking M (1979) Joint segregation of biochemical loci in salmonidae: Results from experiments with Salvelimus and review of the literature on other species. J Fish Res Board Canada 36:1114–1126

    Google Scholar 

  • McCracken GF (1984) Communal nursing in Mexican freetailed bat maternity colonies. Science 223:1090–1091

    Google Scholar 

  • McCracken GF, Bradbury JW (1977) Paternity and genetic heterogeneity in the polygynous bat, Phyllostomus hastatus. Science 198:303–306

    Google Scholar 

  • McKinney F, Derrickson SR, Mineau P (1983) Forced copulation in waterfowl. Behaviour 86:250–294

    Google Scholar 

  • McKinney F, Cheng KM, Bruggers DJ (1984) Forced copulation in wpparently monogamous birds. In: Smith RL (ed) Sperm competition and the evolution of animal mating systems. Academic Press, New York, pp 523–545

    Google Scholar 

  • Ridley M (1978) Paternal care. Anim Behav 26:904–930

    Google Scholar 

  • Selander RK, Smith MH, Yang SY, Johnson WE, Gentry JB (1971) IV. Biochemical polymorphism and systematics in the genus Peromyscus I. Variation in the old-field mouse (Peromyscus polionotus). Studies in Genetics VI. Univ Texas Publ 7103

  • Sherman PW (1981) Electrophoresis and avian genealogical analyses. Auk 98:419–422

    Google Scholar 

  • Trivers RD (1972) Parental investment and sexual selection. In: Campbell B (ed) Sexual Selection and the Decent of Man. Chicago, Aldine, pp 136–179

    Google Scholar 

  • Westneat DF (1987) Extra-pair fertilizations in a predominately monogamous bird: genetic evidence. Anim Behav (in press)

  • Yom-Tov Y (1980) Intraspecific nest parasitism in birds. Biol Rev 55:93–108

    Google Scholar 

Download references

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article

Wrege, P.H., Emlen, S.T. Biochemical determination of parental uncertainty in white-fronted bee-eaters. Behav Ecol Sociobiol 20, 153–160 (1987). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00299728

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Accepted:

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00299728

Keywords

Navigation