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Can birds manipulate sex ratio of their offspring?
Tomiška, Lubomír ; Kratochvíl, Lukáš (advisor) ; Fuchs, Roman (referee)
The aim of this study is a summary of existing knowledge about skewed sex ratio in birds. This controversial topic represents one of the most important questions of evolutionary ecology. We still miss consistence in finding ultimate causes just as proximate mechanisms although there was an expansion of experimental studies already in the last decade of the 20th century which was caused by an invention of the new technology in sex determination. On the other hand, there are many convincing proofs of skewed primary, secondary, tertiary and even quartenary sex ratio so the facultative manipulation or obligatory sex ratio bias is presumable. My Bachelor's thesis compares studies focused on the similar ultimate causes and tries to point out their deficiencies together with contributions to research of this topic. Observation of sex ratio includes many specifics which are mentioned in theoretical introduction. The second part offers potencial proximate mechanisms which could be responsible for sex ratio manipulation. Within the analysis of studies I found sex ratio manipulation of the first egg in clutch as common trend which could fit to selective ovum resorption as a proximate mechanism.

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