National Repository of Grey Literature 14 records found  1 - 10next  jump to record: Search took 0.01 seconds. 
Ornament expression and lifetime reproductive success in male barn swallows (Hirundo rustica)
Wnuková, Lucie ; Albrecht, Tomáš (advisor) ; Klvaňová, Alena (referee)
Within a lifetime of an individual, there are changes in the organism leading to an an impairment of phenotype, survival and reproduction. The expression of phenotypic traits often increases with age. Higher expression of these traits in the young age can lead to decreased probability of survival till the next season, influencing reproductive success of an individual. That is why organisms are challenged with trade-offs, when they have to allocate their limited resources either into the reproduction in form of expression of extravagant sex ornaments or into the life span. If the ornament evolved as a handicap, its exaggerated size could reduce viability of low quality individuals. Therefore, the ornament becomes a predictor of quality of its bearer and its size indicates the ability to survive till the next season. Both sexual ornamentation and inter-individual variation in life span may result in differences in reproductive success (fitness) and targeted by sexual or natural selection. Variability in reproductive success, mainly in monogamous species, can be increased also by sexual promiscuity and extra-pair mating and extra-pair copulations. This strategy can increase the opportunity for selection of traits that play role in choosing of extra-pair mate. In this work, I focused on two potential...
Antipredatory behaviour, sexual selection and reproductive success in domestic sparrow (Passer domesticus).
Klvaňová, Alena
of the thesis Individual components of parental care are disproportionally distributed among the parents in the House Sparrow. While the female broods the nestlings more often and feeds them more frequently, the male defends the nest more intensely. In an experimental study the parents did not adjust their nest defence intensity to behaviour of their partners, nor to brood parameters. Only males tended to defend the sooner broods more intensely, which is in concordance with the "brood value hypothesis". Male contribution to nestling feeding affected their body mass. Male nest defence intensity increased with the size of their melanin ornament. Thus, we assume that the ornament could signal male investment in this component of parental care, while it does not correlate with feeding frequency and time spent by incubation. This output is probably caused by pleiotropic effect of genes regulating melanogenesis, affecting e. g. testosterone plasma level, which is associated with increased agression and lower intensity of other components of parental care as nestling provisioning or incubation. We have also aked the question whether the anti-predator strategy in House Sparrow is stable or depends on the type of the predator. In experiments with three different predator species we showed, that sparrows...
Exaggerated male tail length and sexual selection in birds
Záleská, Josefína ; Albrecht, Tomáš (advisor) ; Klvaňová, Alena (referee)
Elongated tail feathers and tail coverts of birds are used as a textbook example of exaggerated secondary sexual characters evolved through sexual selection via female choice. The female tendency to prefer males with the most elaborate ornaments can be explained on the basis of a positive genetic correlation between the preference and the ornament. Alternatively, an elaborated ornament can indicate good quality and heritable viability of the male and therefore, choosing the most ornamented male, the female chooses for "good genes" for her offsprings. Sexual ornaments can impose negative effects on a different aspect of the individual's life. The compensation for these disadvantages should be enhanced reproductive success of the ornamented males. This thesis aims to summarize main findings of the role of elongated tail feathers in sexual selection in birds, concerning their effects on viability and atractivity of males in different mating systems. It provides an illustrating overview of the occurrence of elongated tail feathers in birds, and puts together available evidence of fitness benefits associated with elongated tail feathers in males. Despite a pervasive interest in the signalling function of tail feather ornaments in birds, most research focuses on only a few model taxa, with often...
The impact of hierarchy in birds on various parameters of fitness
Oblonská, Aneta ; Landová, Eva (advisor) ; Klvaňová, Alena (referee)
Many birds species live in hierarchically structured flocks. The aim of this thesis is determine how the hierarchy is organized to what and extent the hierarchy influence the fitness of dominant individuals. It is focused on the well explored effects of instrinsic factors such as age, body size and sex as well as on the influence of personality that has been examined in recent years. Advantages of hierarchy can be demonstrated by long-term studies, that observe the stability of the hierarchy. Apparently, dominant individuals are able to inform others about their social status and fighting ability through the signal status, which is an honest signal of overall qualities this individuals. Dominant individuals have significantly higher reproductive success, but the mechanisms may differ and reproductive success can achieved through indirect correlations of fitness such as priority food access or better territory. But there are some exceptions where dominant individuals do not profit from their social status. Key words: hierarchy, dominance, social systems, fitness, reproductive success
Ornament expression and lifetime reproductive success in male barn swallows (Hirundo rustica)
Wnuková, Lucie ; Albrecht, Tomáš (advisor) ; Klvaňová, Alena (referee)
Within a lifetime of an individual, there are changes in the organism leading to an an impairment of phenotype, survival and reproduction. The expression of phenotypic traits often increases with age. Higher expression of these traits in the young age can lead to decreased probability of survival till the next season, influencing reproductive success of an individual. That is why organisms are challenged with trade-offs, when they have to allocate their limited resources either into the reproduction in form of expression of extravagant sex ornaments or into the life span. If the ornament evolved as a handicap, its exaggerated size could reduce viability of low quality individuals. Therefore, the ornament becomes a predictor of quality of its bearer and its size indicates the ability to survive till the next season. Both sexual ornamentation and inter-individual variation in life span may result in differences in reproductive success (fitness) and targeted by sexual or natural selection. Variability in reproductive success, mainly in monogamous species, can be increased also by sexual promiscuity and extra-pair mating and extra-pair copulations. This strategy can increase the opportunity for selection of traits that play role in choosing of extra-pair mate. In this work, I focused on two potential...
Antipredatory behaviour, sexual selection and reproductive success in domestic sparrow (Passer domesticus).
Klvaňová, Alena ; Exnerová, Alice (advisor) ; Mlíkovský, Jiří (referee) ; Procházka, Petr (referee)
Anti-predator behaviour, sexual selection and reproductive success in the House Sparrow Passer domesticus Alena Klvaňová Summary of the thesis Individual components of parental care are disproportionally distributed among the parents in the House Sparrow. While the female broods the nestlings more often and feeds them more frequently, the male defends the nest more intensely. In an experimental study the parents did not adjust their nest defence intensity to behaviour of their partners, nor to brood parameters. Only males tended to defend the sooner broods more intensely, which is in concordance with the "brood value hypothesis". Male contribution to nestling feeding affected their body mass. Male nest defence intensity increased with the size of their melanin ornament. Thus, we assume that the ornament could signal male investment in this component of parental care, while it does not correlate with feeding frequency and time spent by incubation. This output is probably caused by pleiotropic effect of genes regulating melanogenesis, affecting e. g. testosterone plasma level, which is associated with increased agression and lower intensity of other components of parental care as nestling provisioning or incubation. We have also aked the question whether the anti-predator strategy in House Sparrow is stable...
Antipredatory behaviour, sexual selection and reproductive success in domestic sparrow (Passer domesticus).
Klvaňová, Alena
of the thesis Individual components of parental care are disproportionally distributed among the parents in the House Sparrow. While the female broods the nestlings more often and feeds them more frequently, the male defends the nest more intensely. In an experimental study the parents did not adjust their nest defence intensity to behaviour of their partners, nor to brood parameters. Only males tended to defend the sooner broods more intensely, which is in concordance with the "brood value hypothesis". Male contribution to nestling feeding affected their body mass. Male nest defence intensity increased with the size of their melanin ornament. Thus, we assume that the ornament could signal male investment in this component of parental care, while it does not correlate with feeding frequency and time spent by incubation. This output is probably caused by pleiotropic effect of genes regulating melanogenesis, affecting e. g. testosterone plasma level, which is associated with increased agression and lower intensity of other components of parental care as nestling provisioning or incubation. We have also aked the question whether the anti-predator strategy in House Sparrow is stable or depends on the type of the predator. In experiments with three different predator species we showed, that sparrows...

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2 Klvaňová, Anna
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