填空题
Single-parent Kids Do Best
Single mums are better at raising their kids than two parents—at least in
the bird world. Mother zebra finches have to work harder and raise fewer chicks
on their own, but they also produce more attractive sons who are more likely to
get a mate.
The finding shows that family conflict is as
important an evolutionary driving force as ecological factors such as hunting
and food supply. {{U}} {{U}} 1 {{/U}} {{/U}}
In
evolutionary terms, the best strategy for any parent in the animal world is to
find someone else to care for their offspring, so they can concentrate on
breeding again. So it's normal for parents to try to pass the buck to each
other. But Ian Hartley from the University of Lancaster and his team wondered
how families solve this conflict, and how the conflict itself affects the
offspring.
{{U}} {{U}} 2 {{/U}} {{/U}}They
compared single females with pairs, by monitoring the amount of food each parent
collected, and removing or adding chicks so that each pair of birds was raising
four chicks, and each single mum had two—supposedly the same amount of
work.
But single mums, they found, put in about 25 per cent
more effort than females rearing with their mate. {{U}} {{U}} 3
{{/U}} {{/U}}"The offspring suffer some of the cost of this conflict," says
Hartley.
The cost does not show in any obvious decrease in size
or weight, but in how attractive they are to the opposite sex. When the chicks
were mature, the researchers tested the "fitness" of the male offspring by
offering females their choice of partner. {{U}} {{U}} 4 {{/U}}
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Sexual conflict has long been thought to affect the
quality of care given to offspring, says zoologist Rebecca Kilner at Cambridge
University, who works on conflict of parents in birds. "But the experimental
evidence is not great. The breakthrough here is showing it
empirically."
More surprising, says Kilner, is Hadley's
statement that conflict may he a strong influence on the evolution of behaviour,
clutch size and even appearance. "People have not really made that link," says
Hartley. A female's reproductive strategy is usually thought to be affected by
hunting and food supply. {{U}} {{U}} 5 {{/U}} {{/U}}
A. To avoid being exploited, mothers with a partner hold back from
working too hard if the father is being lazy, and it's the chicks that pay the
price.
B. To find out, they measured how much effort zebra
finch parents put into raising their babies.
C. Those males
reared by single mums were chosen more often than those from two-parent
families.
D. With two parents around, there's always a conflict
of interests, which can have a detrimental effect on the quality of the
offspring.
E. Kilner says conflict of parents should now be
taken into account as well.
F. It turned out that single mums
had greater influence on their offspring.