Deck 15: Parental Care and Mating Systems

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Question
Trivers (1972) proposed the following, any investment by parents in an offspring that increases the survival of that offspring while decreasing the ability of the parent to invest in other offspring, as the definition of

A) direct parental care.
B) interbrood conflict.
C) parental investment.
D) polygyny.
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Question
Which of the following would NOT be an example of direct parental care?

A) grooming young
B) maintaining a nest
C) nursing young
D) transporting young
Question
Which of the following would NOT be an example of indirect parental care?

A) building a den
B) defense against predators
C) huddling with young
D) territory defense
Question
As a rule, patterns of parental investment should be expected to maximize

A) an individual adult's lifetime reproductive success and not necessarily each reproductive event.
B) an individual adult's lifetime reproductive success, which can be accomplished only by means of maximizing each reproductive event.
C) each reproductive event, as long as that serves to maximize the reproductive success of the individual's mate.
D) each reproductive event, even at the expense of an individual's lifetime reproductive success.
Question
Parental decisions about how much of their own resosurces to devote to reproduction instead of to their own growth and survival and about how to allocate the available resources among their offspring can lead to

A) interbrood conflict.
B) intrabrood conflict.
C) sexual conflict.
D) all of the above.
Question
The fact that the costs of providing care are paid separately by e4ach parent whereas the benefits accrue to both parents irrespective of which one provides the care can lead to

A) interbrood conflict.
B) intrabrood conflict.
C) sexual conflict.
D) all of the above.
Question
Young attempting to obtain resources that parents prefer to distribute to other members of the current brood is likely to result in

A) interbrood conflict.
B) intrabrood conflict.
C) sexual conflict.
D) all of the above.
Question
In domestic piglets (Sus scrofa) the most intense sibling competition occurs

A) before birth.
B) during the birth process.
C) early in the postnatal period.
D) following the juvenile growth spurt.
Question
In domestic piglets (Sus scrofa) frantic battles among littermates that occur shortly after birth are made more intense by their possession of

A) highly variable body sizes.
B) razor-like barbs along their spines.
C) slashing teeth.
D) special edges on the hooves of their hind legs.
Question
The notion that the parents have some insurance in case some of the eggs or offspring fail to develop is one proposed possible explanation for why a parent may

A) be especially responsive to young.
B) encourage siblicide.
C) need help with later broods.
D) produce more young than it can raise successfully.
Question
When Leach's storm-petrel parents were handicapped by having their wing span shortened, they passed the increased reproductive costs to their offspring and maintained their own nutritional condition. In contrast, when starling or flycatcher parents were handicapped in a way that increased their reproductive costs, they bore at least part of the increased costs themselves and continued to allocate nearly the same amount of resources to their chicks. Given an important difference between the petrels and the starlings and flycatchers, these results most directly support the idea that a parent's allocation of resources is influenced by the

A) certainty of paternity.
B) gender of the offspring.
C) life span of the individuals.
D) all of the above.
Question
The degree of certainty that a parent is indeed related to their [purported] offspring is

A) high for females in species that practice internal fertilization.
B) low for males in species that practice internal fertilization.
C) higher for males that practice external fertilization than those that practice internal fertilization.
D) all of the above.
Question
Neff and Sherman (2003) demonstrated that male bluegill sunfish (Lepomis macrochirus) that spawn when sneaker males are present display lower levels of egg defense than control males. In addition, parental males that had 1/3 of their eggs swapped with those of another parental male decreased their level of egg defense more than controls. Together these results indicate that sunfish adjust their level of care depending on

A) certainty of paternity.
B) gender of the offspring.
C) life span of the individuals.
D) all of the above.
Question
If you are a male brown songlark nestling (Cinclorhamphus cruralis), a polygynous species that exhibits strong sexual dimorphism in body size, your mother will probably feed you

A) fewer prey in general than your sibling female nestling.
B) fewer spiders than your sibling female nestling.
C) more grasshoppers than your sibling female nestling.
D) more spiders than your sibling female nestling.
Question
Which of the following combinations most appropriately describes who typically provides care for offspring for that taxonomic group?

A) birds; 81% of species; female only
B) birds; 81% of species; male only
C) mammals; 91% of genera; female only
D) mammals; 91% of genera; male only
Question
A difference between the parental care typically provided by birds and that provided by fishes and amphibians is that, in birds, the care is nearly always biparental; in fishes and amphibians it usually takes the form of solitary male care. Which of the following parental behaviors probably accounts for the difference?

A) feeding offspring
B) guarding offspring
C) providing care for females
D) providing shelter for offspring
Question
Several authors have suggested an association between

A) external fertilization and female only care
B) external fertilization and male only care
C) internal fertilization and male only care
D) internal fertilization and no care
Question
Which of the following descriptions would be TRUE in a species that exhibits full sex role reversal?

A) Males are generally more selective in their choice of mates than are females.
B) Mating competition is more intense among males.
C) The operational sex ratio becomes male-biased.
D) The potential reproductive rate becomes higher for males than for females.
Question
If you are a northern jacana (Jacana spinosa) defending a large territory that encompasses from one to four territories of other individuals, you are almost certainly

A) a cooperative breeder.
B) female.
C) male.
D) very large.
Question
If you are an adult female cuckoo, about how long will it take you to lay an egg in a nest?

A) 10 seconds or less
B) 1 - 3 minutes
C) 10 - 15 minutes
D) 20 minutes or more
Question
Mating systems are frequently defined in terms of the number of copulatory partners per individual per breeding season. When a male and female have only a single mating partner per breeding season, such as system is referred to as

A) monogamy.
B) polyandry.
C) polygynandry.
D) polygyny
Question
Mating systems are frequently defined in terms of the number of copulatory partners per individual per breeding season. When both males and females mate with multiple individuals promiscuously, such as system is referred to as

A) monogamy.
B) polyandry.
C) polygynandry.
D) polygyny
Question
Mating systems are frequently defined in terms of the number of copulatory partners per individual per breeding season. When some males copulate with more than one female during the breeding season, such as system is referred to as

A) monogamy.
B) polyandry.
C) polygynandry.
D) polygyny
Question
Mating systems are frequently defined in terms of the number of copulatory partners per individual per breeding season. When some females mate with more than one male during the breeding season, such as system is referred to as

A) monogamy.
B) polyandry.
C) polygynandry.
D) polygyny
Question
Ecological factors, such as resource quality and distribution and the availability of receptive mates, may influence the mating patterns displayed even within a single species. For example, black howler monkeys (Alouatta pigra), found to be primarily polygynous in a deciduous forest habitat, when studied in a riparian habitat which is much more lush, were found to be

A) monogamous.
B) polyandrous.
C) polygynandrous.
D) polygynous.
Question
Genetic monogamy is

A) a term that makes no assumptions about mating exclusivity or biparental care.
B) an alternative name for social monogamy.
C) found in only 10% of 180 species of socially monogamous songbirds.
D) the most common mating system found among animals.
Question
A male seeking extra-pair matings may

A) be able to boost his reproductive success substantially.
B) lose energy and time in a search for another receptive female.
C) risk his primary mate copulating with another male while he is away.
D) all of the above.
Question
When biparental care is necessary or at least important for offspring survival or when females widely dispersed, the mating system that may be favored is

A) monogamy.
B) polyandry.
C) polygynandry.
D) polygyny
Question
Male California mice (Peromyscus californicus)

A) are one of the small percentage of monogamous mammals.
B) have the capacity to provide parental care but seldom need to.
C) provide modest additions to the female's care of the young.
D) seek extra-pair matings whenever feasible.
Question
Féron and Gouat (2007) found that in mound-building mice (Mus specilegus), the more time a male spent in the nest, the shorter the interval until the next litter. This appears to be a way that both the male and female partners can benefit by exhibiting

A) monogamy.
B) polyandry.
C) polygynandry.
D) polygyny
Question
Baeza (2008) studied a symbiotic shrimp (Pontonia margarita) that lives inside the mantle cavity of the pearl oyster (Pinctada mazatlanica). One of his findings was that body sizes of shrimp and host oysters were closely correlated, suggesting that particular associations are long lasting. These data were consistent with social (and perhaps, genetic) monogamy in the shrimp. What other aspect(s) of the shrimps' life style would support that conclusion?

A) If there were two shrimp per host, they were always a male and a female.
B) The oyster hosts are small in size and are rare.
C) The shrimp live in predator-rich waters and would be especially vulnerable when away from their host.
D) all of the above.
Question
Kirk's dik-dik (Madoqua kirkii) is a very small African antelope that forms monogamous bonds that last for years, during which time the male prevents other males from knowing when the female is in estrus. The males appear to be absolutely faithful to their mates. They appear to practice monogamy because

A) biparental care is necessary to successfully raise their young.
B) the cost of guarding more than one female is too great.
C) the male's territory is typically in a habitat too harsh to support more than one female.
D) there is an unusually high risk of infanticide in this species.
Question
At Vernor and Willson's (1966) polygyny threshold, from a fitness standpoint,

A) a female is better off switching to a monogamous strategy.
B) a female is better off switching to a polygynous strategy.
C) a male is better off switching to a monogamous strategy.
D) a male is better off switching to a polygynous strategy.
Question
Pribil and Picman (1966) found that in a Canadian population of red-winged blackbirds, all things being equal, females unanimously preferred to settle on the territory of a bachelor male rather than that of an already mated male. When the quality of the territories was altered to make that of the mated male superior to that of the bachelor male, the females

A) continued to prefer to settle with bachelor males.
B) left the research area in search of bachelor males with higher quality territories.
C) settled first on the territory of a mated male.
D) were evenly divided in their preferences between mated and bachelor males.
Question
The idea that access to good genes for offspring might compensate a female for the costs of polygyny is referred to as the

A) direct fitness hypothesis.
B) distribution of females hypothesis.
C) polygyny threshold hypothesis.
D) sexy son hypothesis.
Question
Huk and Winkel (2006) studied pied flycatchers (Ficedula hypoleuca) and found that their data did not support the sexy son hypothesis. This appeared to be due primarily to

A) the inferior quality of the male's territory.
B) the male's inability to adequately support any of his offspring when he had more than one mate.
C) the male's reduced parental care for offspring of secondary females.
D) all of the above.
Question
When females live in groups that a male can easily defend, this is known as

A) female defense polygyny.
B) lek polygyny.
C) resource defense polygyny.
D) secondary defense polygyny.
Question
When males defend resources essential to female reproduction, this is known as

A) female defense polygyny.
B) lek polygyny.
C) resource defense polygyny.
D) secondary defense polygyny.
Question
When males defend symbolic territories that are often located at traditional display sites, this is known as

A) female defense polygyny.
B) lek polygyny.
C) resource defense polygyny.
D) secondary defense polygyny.
Question
Males of lek species

A) defend groups of females that are living near one another.
B) defend only their small territory on the lek itself.
C) defend resources that are important to females.
D) display unusually high levels of parental care.
Question
Polyandry is now known to

A) be widespread across taxonomic groups.
B) increase access to critical resources for females.
C) increase access to male parental assistance.
D) all of the above.
Question
Mattila and Seeley (2007) studied honey bees of the genus Apis, social insects that exhibit polyandry. They established colonies of honey bees that were either genetically diverse (the queen was artificially inseminated with sperm from 15 different drones) or genetically uniform (the queen was inseminated with the same volume of sperm but from a single drone). They found that genetically diverse colonies

A) failed to differ in any significant way from genetically uniform colonies.
B) weighed less than genetically uniform colonies.
C) were less efficient than uniform colonies at building the comb.
D) were more likely to survive the winter.
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Deck 15: Parental Care and Mating Systems
1
Trivers (1972) proposed the following, any investment by parents in an offspring that increases the survival of that offspring while decreasing the ability of the parent to invest in other offspring, as the definition of

A) direct parental care.
B) interbrood conflict.
C) parental investment.
D) polygyny.
parental investment.
2
Which of the following would NOT be an example of direct parental care?

A) grooming young
B) maintaining a nest
C) nursing young
D) transporting young
maintaining a nest
3
Which of the following would NOT be an example of indirect parental care?

A) building a den
B) defense against predators
C) huddling with young
D) territory defense
huddling with young
4
As a rule, patterns of parental investment should be expected to maximize

A) an individual adult's lifetime reproductive success and not necessarily each reproductive event.
B) an individual adult's lifetime reproductive success, which can be accomplished only by means of maximizing each reproductive event.
C) each reproductive event, as long as that serves to maximize the reproductive success of the individual's mate.
D) each reproductive event, even at the expense of an individual's lifetime reproductive success.
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5
Parental decisions about how much of their own resosurces to devote to reproduction instead of to their own growth and survival and about how to allocate the available resources among their offspring can lead to

A) interbrood conflict.
B) intrabrood conflict.
C) sexual conflict.
D) all of the above.
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Unlock for access to all 42 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
The fact that the costs of providing care are paid separately by e4ach parent whereas the benefits accrue to both parents irrespective of which one provides the care can lead to

A) interbrood conflict.
B) intrabrood conflict.
C) sexual conflict.
D) all of the above.
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Unlock for access to all 42 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
7
Young attempting to obtain resources that parents prefer to distribute to other members of the current brood is likely to result in

A) interbrood conflict.
B) intrabrood conflict.
C) sexual conflict.
D) all of the above.
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Unlock for access to all 42 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
In domestic piglets (Sus scrofa) the most intense sibling competition occurs

A) before birth.
B) during the birth process.
C) early in the postnatal period.
D) following the juvenile growth spurt.
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Unlock for access to all 42 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
In domestic piglets (Sus scrofa) frantic battles among littermates that occur shortly after birth are made more intense by their possession of

A) highly variable body sizes.
B) razor-like barbs along their spines.
C) slashing teeth.
D) special edges on the hooves of their hind legs.
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Unlock for access to all 42 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
The notion that the parents have some insurance in case some of the eggs or offspring fail to develop is one proposed possible explanation for why a parent may

A) be especially responsive to young.
B) encourage siblicide.
C) need help with later broods.
D) produce more young than it can raise successfully.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 42 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
When Leach's storm-petrel parents were handicapped by having their wing span shortened, they passed the increased reproductive costs to their offspring and maintained their own nutritional condition. In contrast, when starling or flycatcher parents were handicapped in a way that increased their reproductive costs, they bore at least part of the increased costs themselves and continued to allocate nearly the same amount of resources to their chicks. Given an important difference between the petrels and the starlings and flycatchers, these results most directly support the idea that a parent's allocation of resources is influenced by the

A) certainty of paternity.
B) gender of the offspring.
C) life span of the individuals.
D) all of the above.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 42 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
The degree of certainty that a parent is indeed related to their [purported] offspring is

A) high for females in species that practice internal fertilization.
B) low for males in species that practice internal fertilization.
C) higher for males that practice external fertilization than those that practice internal fertilization.
D) all of the above.
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Unlock for access to all 42 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Neff and Sherman (2003) demonstrated that male bluegill sunfish (Lepomis macrochirus) that spawn when sneaker males are present display lower levels of egg defense than control males. In addition, parental males that had 1/3 of their eggs swapped with those of another parental male decreased their level of egg defense more than controls. Together these results indicate that sunfish adjust their level of care depending on

A) certainty of paternity.
B) gender of the offspring.
C) life span of the individuals.
D) all of the above.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 42 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
If you are a male brown songlark nestling (Cinclorhamphus cruralis), a polygynous species that exhibits strong sexual dimorphism in body size, your mother will probably feed you

A) fewer prey in general than your sibling female nestling.
B) fewer spiders than your sibling female nestling.
C) more grasshoppers than your sibling female nestling.
D) more spiders than your sibling female nestling.
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Unlock for access to all 42 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Which of the following combinations most appropriately describes who typically provides care for offspring for that taxonomic group?

A) birds; 81% of species; female only
B) birds; 81% of species; male only
C) mammals; 91% of genera; female only
D) mammals; 91% of genera; male only
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Unlock for access to all 42 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
A difference between the parental care typically provided by birds and that provided by fishes and amphibians is that, in birds, the care is nearly always biparental; in fishes and amphibians it usually takes the form of solitary male care. Which of the following parental behaviors probably accounts for the difference?

A) feeding offspring
B) guarding offspring
C) providing care for females
D) providing shelter for offspring
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Unlock for access to all 42 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Several authors have suggested an association between

A) external fertilization and female only care
B) external fertilization and male only care
C) internal fertilization and male only care
D) internal fertilization and no care
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Unlock for access to all 42 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Which of the following descriptions would be TRUE in a species that exhibits full sex role reversal?

A) Males are generally more selective in their choice of mates than are females.
B) Mating competition is more intense among males.
C) The operational sex ratio becomes male-biased.
D) The potential reproductive rate becomes higher for males than for females.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 42 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
If you are a northern jacana (Jacana spinosa) defending a large territory that encompasses from one to four territories of other individuals, you are almost certainly

A) a cooperative breeder.
B) female.
C) male.
D) very large.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
If you are an adult female cuckoo, about how long will it take you to lay an egg in a nest?

A) 10 seconds or less
B) 1 - 3 minutes
C) 10 - 15 minutes
D) 20 minutes or more
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k this deck
21
Mating systems are frequently defined in terms of the number of copulatory partners per individual per breeding season. When a male and female have only a single mating partner per breeding season, such as system is referred to as

A) monogamy.
B) polyandry.
C) polygynandry.
D) polygyny
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Unlock for access to all 42 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Mating systems are frequently defined in terms of the number of copulatory partners per individual per breeding season. When both males and females mate with multiple individuals promiscuously, such as system is referred to as

A) monogamy.
B) polyandry.
C) polygynandry.
D) polygyny
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Unlock for access to all 42 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
Mating systems are frequently defined in terms of the number of copulatory partners per individual per breeding season. When some males copulate with more than one female during the breeding season, such as system is referred to as

A) monogamy.
B) polyandry.
C) polygynandry.
D) polygyny
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Mating systems are frequently defined in terms of the number of copulatory partners per individual per breeding season. When some females mate with more than one male during the breeding season, such as system is referred to as

A) monogamy.
B) polyandry.
C) polygynandry.
D) polygyny
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Unlock for access to all 42 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Ecological factors, such as resource quality and distribution and the availability of receptive mates, may influence the mating patterns displayed even within a single species. For example, black howler monkeys (Alouatta pigra), found to be primarily polygynous in a deciduous forest habitat, when studied in a riparian habitat which is much more lush, were found to be

A) monogamous.
B) polyandrous.
C) polygynandrous.
D) polygynous.
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Unlock for access to all 42 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Genetic monogamy is

A) a term that makes no assumptions about mating exclusivity or biparental care.
B) an alternative name for social monogamy.
C) found in only 10% of 180 species of socially monogamous songbirds.
D) the most common mating system found among animals.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 42 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
A male seeking extra-pair matings may

A) be able to boost his reproductive success substantially.
B) lose energy and time in a search for another receptive female.
C) risk his primary mate copulating with another male while he is away.
D) all of the above.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 42 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
When biparental care is necessary or at least important for offspring survival or when females widely dispersed, the mating system that may be favored is

A) monogamy.
B) polyandry.
C) polygynandry.
D) polygyny
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 42 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Male California mice (Peromyscus californicus)

A) are one of the small percentage of monogamous mammals.
B) have the capacity to provide parental care but seldom need to.
C) provide modest additions to the female's care of the young.
D) seek extra-pair matings whenever feasible.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 42 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Féron and Gouat (2007) found that in mound-building mice (Mus specilegus), the more time a male spent in the nest, the shorter the interval until the next litter. This appears to be a way that both the male and female partners can benefit by exhibiting

A) monogamy.
B) polyandry.
C) polygynandry.
D) polygyny
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 42 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Baeza (2008) studied a symbiotic shrimp (Pontonia margarita) that lives inside the mantle cavity of the pearl oyster (Pinctada mazatlanica). One of his findings was that body sizes of shrimp and host oysters were closely correlated, suggesting that particular associations are long lasting. These data were consistent with social (and perhaps, genetic) monogamy in the shrimp. What other aspect(s) of the shrimps' life style would support that conclusion?

A) If there were two shrimp per host, they were always a male and a female.
B) The oyster hosts are small in size and are rare.
C) The shrimp live in predator-rich waters and would be especially vulnerable when away from their host.
D) all of the above.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 42 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Kirk's dik-dik (Madoqua kirkii) is a very small African antelope that forms monogamous bonds that last for years, during which time the male prevents other males from knowing when the female is in estrus. The males appear to be absolutely faithful to their mates. They appear to practice monogamy because

A) biparental care is necessary to successfully raise their young.
B) the cost of guarding more than one female is too great.
C) the male's territory is typically in a habitat too harsh to support more than one female.
D) there is an unusually high risk of infanticide in this species.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 42 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
At Vernor and Willson's (1966) polygyny threshold, from a fitness standpoint,

A) a female is better off switching to a monogamous strategy.
B) a female is better off switching to a polygynous strategy.
C) a male is better off switching to a monogamous strategy.
D) a male is better off switching to a polygynous strategy.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 42 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
Pribil and Picman (1966) found that in a Canadian population of red-winged blackbirds, all things being equal, females unanimously preferred to settle on the territory of a bachelor male rather than that of an already mated male. When the quality of the territories was altered to make that of the mated male superior to that of the bachelor male, the females

A) continued to prefer to settle with bachelor males.
B) left the research area in search of bachelor males with higher quality territories.
C) settled first on the territory of a mated male.
D) were evenly divided in their preferences between mated and bachelor males.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 42 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
The idea that access to good genes for offspring might compensate a female for the costs of polygyny is referred to as the

A) direct fitness hypothesis.
B) distribution of females hypothesis.
C) polygyny threshold hypothesis.
D) sexy son hypothesis.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 42 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
Huk and Winkel (2006) studied pied flycatchers (Ficedula hypoleuca) and found that their data did not support the sexy son hypothesis. This appeared to be due primarily to

A) the inferior quality of the male's territory.
B) the male's inability to adequately support any of his offspring when he had more than one mate.
C) the male's reduced parental care for offspring of secondary females.
D) all of the above.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 42 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
When females live in groups that a male can easily defend, this is known as

A) female defense polygyny.
B) lek polygyny.
C) resource defense polygyny.
D) secondary defense polygyny.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 42 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
When males defend resources essential to female reproduction, this is known as

A) female defense polygyny.
B) lek polygyny.
C) resource defense polygyny.
D) secondary defense polygyny.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 42 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
When males defend symbolic territories that are often located at traditional display sites, this is known as

A) female defense polygyny.
B) lek polygyny.
C) resource defense polygyny.
D) secondary defense polygyny.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 42 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
Males of lek species

A) defend groups of females that are living near one another.
B) defend only their small territory on the lek itself.
C) defend resources that are important to females.
D) display unusually high levels of parental care.
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41
Polyandry is now known to

A) be widespread across taxonomic groups.
B) increase access to critical resources for females.
C) increase access to male parental assistance.
D) all of the above.
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42
Mattila and Seeley (2007) studied honey bees of the genus Apis, social insects that exhibit polyandry. They established colonies of honey bees that were either genetically diverse (the queen was artificially inseminated with sperm from 15 different drones) or genetically uniform (the queen was inseminated with the same volume of sperm but from a single drone). They found that genetically diverse colonies

A) failed to differ in any significant way from genetically uniform colonies.
B) weighed less than genetically uniform colonies.
C) were less efficient than uniform colonies at building the comb.
D) were more likely to survive the winter.
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