Melanin-based plumage ornamentation signals condition and physiological stress in the Black-headed Gull

2019 
There is increasing evidence that melanin-based plumage ornaments play a role in the sexual selection of birds, although there seems to be little consensus on the mechanisms underlying the signalling function of melanin-based plumage. The aim of this study was to assess the potential of a melanin-based plumage ornament (brown hood) to reflect components of individual quality (condition and physiological stress) in a common larid species, the Black-headed Gull Chroicocephalus ridibundus. For this purpose, we measured the size of the hood in over 500 Black-headed Gulls captured in several breeding colonies distributed across Poland. We found that hood size correlated positively with blood haemoglobin concentration, although we found no evidence for a relationship with blood glucose concentration or body mass. There was also a negative relationship between hood size and physiological stress, as assessed by leucocyte profiles (heterophil/lymphocyte ratio). We found this correlation in both sexes, suggesting that hood size may be an honest signal of individual quality in males and females, which implies a mutual mate choice in the Black-headed Gull. Finally, the relationship between hood size and blood haemoglobin concentration was primarily attributed to the parallel variation of these traits among the colonies, suggesting that Black-headed Gulls may settle in colonies in a despotic manner. As far as we are aware, our study is one of the first to show an honest signalling role of melanin-based ornaments in the gull family, Laridae. It remains to be tested whether different melanin-based plumage ornaments in gulls are developmentally and functionally integrated with each other and with carotenoid-based integument coloration.
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