@article{7426ade5594d4a2db0146c1fcb70bd22,
title = "Paternal behaviour in a socially monogamous but sexually promiscuous passerine bird",
abstract = "We documented parental behaviour and paternity of eastern kingbirds (Tyrannus tyrannus) to test the predictions that paternal care would decline with increasing loss of paternity, increasing nesting density (a proxy for probability of paternity loss), male quality, and number of fertile females available in the population. Extra-pair young were found in 58% of 45 nests for which behaviour was recorded and a higher proportion of young were extra-pair as nesting density increased. Male feeding rate declined with increasing nesting density and male quality, but neither feeding rate nor a composite measure of paternal behaviour varied with number of fertile females or paternity. Although alternative explanations exist, one interpretation of the reduced paternal care at high nesting density was that it was a response to perceived threats of paternity loss. The ultimate basis for the lower paternal effort of higher quality males is unclear but we discuss several possible explanations.",
author = "Chutter, {Christopher M.} and Redmond, {Lucas J.} and Cooper, {Nathan W.} and Dolan, {Amy C.} and Deborah Duffield and Murphy, {Michael T.}",
note = "Funding Information: Our work was funded by a National Science Foundation (grant number IOS-0539370; MTM), an NSERC grant (application number 389391-2010; CMC), and additional sources that include the Forbes-Lea Fund of Portland State University, The Frank M. Chapman Fund of the American Museum of Natural History, Student Research Awards from the American Ornithologists' Union, and the Animal Behaviour Society. Without their support this work would not have been possible. We thank all of the members of the various kingbird research teams that have assembled over the years for the diligence and hard work expended in capturing and marking birds, and in collecting the data that are the foundation for our paper. Luis Ruedas allowed us to borrow his canoe year-after-year to conduct surveys along the river. We are also thankful for the cooperation of the staff of Malheur National Wildlife Refuge, and in particular acknowledge the permission granted by Chief Biologists Richard Roy and James Daystyck to work on the refuge. Cal and Alice Elshoff provided great friendship, as did the staff at Malheur Field Station (Duncan Evered and Lyla Messick). Lastly, we thank two anonymous reviewers for helping to improve our presentation. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, 2016.",
year = "2016",
doi = "10.1163/1568539X-00003359",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "153",
pages = "443--466",
journal = "Behaviour",
issn = "0005-7959",
publisher = "Brill Academic Publishers",
number = "4",
}