Unhatched eggs represent the invisible fraction in two wild bird populations
Nicola Hemmings, Simon Evans
Abstract
Prenatal mortality is typically overlooked in population studies, which biases evolutionary inference by confounding selection and inheritance. Birds represent an opportunity to include this 'invisible fraction' if each egg contains a zygote, but whether hatching failure is caused by fertilization failure versus prenatal mortality is largely unknown. We quantified fertilization failure rates in two bird species that are popular systems for studying evolutionary dynamics and found that overwhelming majorities (99.9%) of laid eggs were fertilized. These systems thus present opportunities to eliminate the invisible fraction from life-history data.
Topics & Concepts
BiologyHatchingHuman fertilizationZygotePopulationEvolutionary biologySelection (genetic algorithm)Natural selectionConfoundingZoologyEcologyDemographyGeneticsEmbryoArtificial intelligenceEmbryogenesisComputer scienceMathematicsSociologyStatisticsAnimal Behavior and ReproductionAvian ecology and behaviorFish Ecology and Management Studies