Female Dispersal and Inbreeding in the Red-cockaded Woodpecker

Dispersal is a critical life-history component; it determines gene flow and has profound effects on population structure, demography, social systems, and population viability. To add to our knowledge of dispersal and, in particular, our understanding of the relationship between dispersal and inbreed...

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Main Author: Daniels, Susan J.
Other Authors: Biology
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/36971
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-81197-102711/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-369712021-04-09T05:34:29Z Female Dispersal and Inbreeding in the Red-cockaded Woodpecker Daniels, Susan J. Biology Walters, Jeffrey R. Andrews, Robin M. Notter, David R. cooperative breeding optimal inbreeding inbreeding avoidance inbreeding depression breeding dispersal natal dispersal Picoides borealis Dispersal is a critical life-history component; it determines gene flow and has profound effects on population structure, demography, social systems, and population viability. To add to our knowledge of dispersal and, in particular, our understanding of the relationship between dispersal and inbreeding, I studied three aspects of the biology of the red-cockaded woodpecker: dispersal of breeding females; the costs, benefits, and frequency of inbreeding; and the effect of inbreeding on natal dispersal. Dispersal of breeding female red-cockaded woodpeckers is strongly associated with inbreeding avoidance and mate choice, weakly associated with site choice, and not found to be associated with social constraints. Estimates of mortality for non-dispersing and dispersing breeding females were 24 and 59 percent per year, respectively-rare evidence of the cost of breeding dispersal. Significant costs of close inbreeding were found. Closely related pairs (kinship coefficient greater than 0.1) had lower hatching success as well as lower survival and recruitment of fledglings than unrelated pairs. Moderately related pairs (kinship coefficient between 0 and 0.1) and moderately inbred individuals had increased hatching success, but did not produce more young. Despite documented costs of close inbreeding and a predictable spatial distribution of closely related males near the natal territory, female fledglings disperse a median of only two territories and a modal distance of one territory. Natal dispersal of females is affected by closely related males on the natal site but unaffected by closely related males or moderately related males that are off the natal site. Master of Science 2014-03-14T20:52:22Z 2014-03-14T20:52:22Z 1997-08-25 1997-08-25 1998-09-11 1997-09-11 Thesis etd-81197-102711 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/36971 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-81197-102711/ ETD.PDF TABLE21.PDF In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic cooperative breeding
optimal inbreeding
inbreeding avoidance
inbreeding depression
breeding dispersal
natal dispersal
Picoides borealis
spellingShingle cooperative breeding
optimal inbreeding
inbreeding avoidance
inbreeding depression
breeding dispersal
natal dispersal
Picoides borealis
Daniels, Susan J.
Female Dispersal and Inbreeding in the Red-cockaded Woodpecker
description Dispersal is a critical life-history component; it determines gene flow and has profound effects on population structure, demography, social systems, and population viability. To add to our knowledge of dispersal and, in particular, our understanding of the relationship between dispersal and inbreeding, I studied three aspects of the biology of the red-cockaded woodpecker: dispersal of breeding females; the costs, benefits, and frequency of inbreeding; and the effect of inbreeding on natal dispersal. Dispersal of breeding female red-cockaded woodpeckers is strongly associated with inbreeding avoidance and mate choice, weakly associated with site choice, and not found to be associated with social constraints. Estimates of mortality for non-dispersing and dispersing breeding females were 24 and 59 percent per year, respectively-rare evidence of the cost of breeding dispersal. Significant costs of close inbreeding were found. Closely related pairs (kinship coefficient greater than 0.1) had lower hatching success as well as lower survival and recruitment of fledglings than unrelated pairs. Moderately related pairs (kinship coefficient between 0 and 0.1) and moderately inbred individuals had increased hatching success, but did not produce more young. Despite documented costs of close inbreeding and a predictable spatial distribution of closely related males near the natal territory, female fledglings disperse a median of only two territories and a modal distance of one territory. Natal dispersal of females is affected by closely related males on the natal site but unaffected by closely related males or moderately related males that are off the natal site. === Master of Science
author2 Biology
author_facet Biology
Daniels, Susan J.
author Daniels, Susan J.
author_sort Daniels, Susan J.
title Female Dispersal and Inbreeding in the Red-cockaded Woodpecker
title_short Female Dispersal and Inbreeding in the Red-cockaded Woodpecker
title_full Female Dispersal and Inbreeding in the Red-cockaded Woodpecker
title_fullStr Female Dispersal and Inbreeding in the Red-cockaded Woodpecker
title_full_unstemmed Female Dispersal and Inbreeding in the Red-cockaded Woodpecker
title_sort female dispersal and inbreeding in the red-cockaded woodpecker
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/36971
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-81197-102711/
work_keys_str_mv AT danielssusanj femaledispersalandinbreedingintheredcockadedwoodpecker
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