作者: Scott Forbes , Suzanne Thornton , Barb Glassey , Margaret Forbes , Neil J. Buckley
DOI: 10.1038/37025
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摘要: Most birds hatch their broods asynchronously, which leads to reduced growth and higher mortality of last-hatched nestlings1,2,3. Why parent confer handicaps on some progeny, advantages others, remains controversial, although a consensus is emerging that there no single adaptive explanation2,3. Our studies red-winged blackbirds provide confirmation an insurance hypothesis4,5,6,7,8,9 where the marginal offspring created by hatching asynchrony serve as replacements for failed earlier-hatched or ‘core’ offspring.