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Testing the mediating role of female-male social interactions on the relationship between age and reproductive success.

Laubach, Z. M.; Keller, K. P.; Safran, R. J.; Tsunekage, T.; Levin, I. I.

2025-03-07 animal behavior and cognition
10.1101/2025.03.06.641912 bioRxiv
Show abstract

Differential reproduction is a key driver of evolution that is determined by individual characteristics and mating opportunities, including mate choice. Social interactions between conspecifics are hypothesized to be important in facilitating mate choice and reproductive success but are difficult to measure. Using data from 52 adult barn swallows (Hirundo rustica erythrogaster), whose social interactions were measured via proximity tags, we tested the hypothesis that social interactions mediate the relationship between age (a proxy for experience) and condition-dependent plumage traits, and their associations with reproductive success. We found that older female barn swallows had higher fecundity and that older males have higher paternity. Older males achieved higher paternity through extra pair copulations, not by greater paternity with their social mate. Longer tail streamers were associated with greater fecundity/paternity in both sexes, but this effect was independent of age only among females. Darker ventral plumage coloration was not associated with higher reproductive success in either sex. We also observed that older birds appear to be less social with conspecifics, as indicated by fewer numbers of social interactions, though these associations were only marginally significant in males. Interestingly, females with fewer social interactions had higher fecundity. Finally, we found no evidence of mediation by the number of social interactions. Taken together, our results suggest that older, more experienced birds can produce more offspring while being less social.

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