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In most bird species, females disperse prior to their first breeding attempt, while males remain close to the place they were hatched for their entire lives (Greenwood and Harvey (1982)). Explanations for such female bias in natal dispersal have focused on the potential benefits that males derive from knowing the

In most bird species, females disperse prior to their first breeding attempt, while males remain close to the place they were hatched for their entire lives (Greenwood and Harvey (1982)). Explanations for such female bias in natal dispersal have focused on the potential benefits that males derive from knowing the local environment to establish territories, while females search for suitable mates (Greenwood (1980)). However, the variables shaping dispersal decisions appear more complex (Mabry et al. (2013), Végvári et al. (2018)). There are a number of different variables that could act as a driving force behind dispersal including the social mating system, food competition, inbreeding avoidance, predation, and others. Here, we investigate whether females are the dispersing sex in great-tailed grackles, which have a mating system where the males hold territories and the females choose which territory to place their nest in (Johnson et al. (2000)). We used genetic approaches to identify sex biases in the propensity to disperse. In the experiment, we found that the male grackles were less related to each other while the female grackles were more related to each other. Building on that, the average distance between closely related individuals of the male group was longer than the average distance of closely related females. But, the mantel correlograms for the males and females both lack a consistent trend. Overall, the results indicated suggest that the males are the dispersing sex while the females are potentially philopatric and that the average dispersal distance for the grackle is greater than 2000 meters, the size of the sampling range used in the experiment. These results will inform our long-term study on the relationship between behavioral flexibility and rapid geographic range expansion by elucidating which individuals are likely to experience similar conditions across their lives, and which are likely to face new conditions when they become breeders.
ContributorsSevchik, August L (Author) / Langergraber, Kevin (Thesis director) / Logan, Corina (Committee member) / College of Integrative Sciences and Arts (Contributor) / School of Molecular Sciences (Contributor) / School of Life Sciences (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2020-05