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  1. The number of offspring parents rear varies considerably among closely related lineages, individuals, and even reproductive events by one individual. Constraints can come at any point, from the costs of producing a large clutch to the cost of caring for a large brood of dependent young. We report here on observations of the early phase of a reproductive cycle in a captive colony of Oophaga pumilio, a poison frog with offspring entirely dependent on maternally provisioned trophic eggs. We tracked reproductive clutches, and found that while clutch and egg size were variable, neither predicted the success of a clutch; there was also no evidence of a trade-off between clutch and egg size. Larger eggs did, however, produce larger tadpoles, and when parents transported only a subset of the brood to nurseries, the tadpoles they moved were larger than the ones they did not. Adaptive adjustment of parental investment is a key life-history trait, and a complete accounting of the way families are constructed is key to understanding the evolution of parental care, parental favoritism, and cooperation and conflict among closely related individuals. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available August 23, 2024
  2. Abstract

    Parasites have profound and widespread implications for the ecology and evolution of hosts, and human activity has increased the frequency of interactions between hosts and parasites that have not co-evolved. For example, by building habitat attractive for nesting, humans might have facilitated range expansion by cliff swallows (Petrochelidon pyrrhonata) and barn swallows (Hirundo rustica) in North America, concurrently allowing a haematophagous ectoparasite of cliff swallows, the swallow bug (Oeciacus vicarious), to infest the nests of barn swallows. We found that in barn swallow nests infested with swallow bugs, nestlings weighed less and had lower haematocrit, and the within-brood variation in body mass and tarsus length was higher. Information about these negative effects might be available to parents via mouth coloration, a condition-dependent component of the begging signal. We found that nestlings from infested broods had lower-intensity carotenoid-based and ultraviolet mouth colours, although most elements of colour were unrelated to parasites. Host switching by the swallow bug offers excellent opportunities to understand the direct and indirect effects of a novel parasite and might also afford insights into how parasites cope with selective pressures exerted by closely related hosts with key ecological differences.

     
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