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Pair disruption in female zebra finches: Consequences for offspring phenotype and sensitivity to a social stressor

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Citation

Schweitzer, C., Schwabl, H., Baran, N. M., & Adkins-Regan, E. (2014). Pair disruption in female zebra finches: Consequences for offspring phenotype and sensitivity to a social stressor. Animal Behaviour, 90, 195-204. doi:10.1016/j.anbehav.2014.01.022.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0007-12F9-C
Abstract
Maternal effects can result in transgenerational phenotypic plasticity, in which environmental variation experienced by mothers is translated into phenotypic variation in offspring. Although maternal effects have been a focus of much recent research, little is known about the long-term consequences of disturbance of the maternal social environment on offspring phenotype in socially monogamous and biparental species. We hypothesized that pair separation followed by re-pairing may generate maternal effects on offspring development. Here, we gave previously paired female zebra finches access to new males 6 days following removal of their original partner to assess experimentally the effects of re-pairing (an ecologically relevant form of social disturbance) on female reproductive investment, yolk corticosterone concentrations and subsequent offspring phenotype. Pair disruption boosted growth in female offspring and delayed the development of plumage colour sex dimorphism in males. Although yolk corticosterone concentrations were not affected by the treatment, offspring from treated mothers were less responsive to social isolation in a novel environment compared to control offspring. This is, to our knowledge, the first study demonstrating that maternal re-pairing prior to hatching has long-lasting effects on offspring phenotype in a socially monogamous and biparental species. Our results also suggest that prehatching maternal effects of this social disturbance are not mediated by maternal yolk corticosterone. Additional studies are required to determine the potential pathways of these maternal effects (e. g. other hormones, epigenetic programming, protein/nutrient content of eggs, etc.) and their adaptive value. (C) 2014 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.