# Variation in parental investment preferences for nestlings of the Gray‐backed Shrike (Lanius tephronotus) in alpine environments

**Authors:** Jinyuan Zeng, Yueqi Li, Yuhan Gong, Yurou Shi, Hongyuan Feng, Sen Song

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/ece3.70267 · 2024-09-18

## TL;DR

Gray-backed Shrikes adjust their parenting strategies in harsh alpine environments, favoring larger clutches and eggs as rainfall decreases.

## Contribution

The study reveals how environmental factors influence parental investment and feeding preferences in Gray-backed Shrikes.

## Key findings

- Gray-backed Shrikes lay larger clutches and bigger eggs in colder, drier alpine conditions.
- Parents show decreasing hatching order and feeding preferences influenced by nest sex ratios and temperature.
- Male parents prefer feeding male nestlings, while females show no strong preference, affecting survival rates.

## Abstract

In the northeastern edge of the Qinghai‐Tibet Plateau, the Gray‐backed Shrike, a shrubland bird species of the plateau, confronts harsh living conditions. The impact of such an environment on their reproductive strategies has long intrigued us. This study reveals significant environmental effects on the investment of the Gray‐backed Shrike during their nestling‐rearing and egg‐laying stages. (1) Based on measurements of 215 shrike eggs from 2017 to 2021, we found that under the cold alpine climate, Gray‐backed Shrikes opt for a strategy of larger clutches and bigger eggs as average rainfall decreases. Concurrently, parents display a decreasing hatching order strategy, resulting in significant weight differences among newly hatched nestlings. (2) Marginal and core offspring exhibited no significant differences in fledging conditions. Core offspring generally have a slightly larger physique than marginal ones. However, marginal offspring exhibit the highest growth rate, with similar survival rates across different offspring categories. Parental rearing adopts a nest survival strategy. (3) The food provisioning rate by parents correlates strongly with the number of nestlings, the age of the nestling, and the nest's sex ratio. Differences exist between female and male provisioning rates based on begging intensity and average temperature; higher average temperatures lead to more food, with males providing more food. (4) Factors like nest sex ratio, offspring category, nestling age, and nestling sex influence the feeding preferences of parents. When overall nestling ratios skew towards either male or female, parental feeding preferences align with the actual nest sex ratio. Male and female parental feeding preferences differ based on average temperature and nestling sex. Males consistently exhibit a stronger preference for feeding male nestlings, regardless of the nest's sex ratio. In contrast, females don't show a clear preference, leading to differences in survival rates for different nestling sex under male feeding preferences.

This manuscript studied the breeding behavior in the Gray‐backed Shrike (Lanius tephronotus); the research object is valuable. Then, the research conclusion about parental investment preferences has certain reference value.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Lanius tephronotus (taxon 466049)

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Lanius tephronotus (species) [taxon 466049]

## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11410560/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11410560