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      Cooperative Breeding in Gray Jays: Philopatric Offspring Provision Juvenile Siblings

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      The Condor
      JSTOR

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          Offspring retention in the Siberian jay {Perisoreus infaustus): the prolonged brood care hypothesis

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            Juvenile dispersal in Gray Jays: dominant brood member expels siblings from natal territory

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              Survival enhancement through food sharing: a means for parental control of natal dispersal.

              The value of food sharing among relatives is analyzed for a situation where fitness equals survival. In seasonal environments the minimum food abundance may set a limit to group living. Delayed dispersal is predicted to be linked to relaxed winter competition and high parental survival. Enhanced survival for the offspring when parents share food could be a sufficient reason to delay dispersal, while early dispersal in advance of food shortage periods may be induced by a competitive relationship. At low resource abundance dominant parents do best by being competitive and retaining all resources. For food abundance higher than the expected requirements food sharing with independent offspring is possible, although it has a non-zero cost. Food sharing parents still retain most of resources to themselves, but the resource share given to subordinate offspring gradually gets larger when food abundance increases. Except for at very low food abundance, where subordinates may adopt a "suicidal" behaviour and cede their resources to the dominant, there is a conflict over how to share the resources.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                The Condor
                The Condor
                JSTOR
                00105422
                1938-5129
                May 1997
                May 1997
                : 99
                : 2
                : 523-525
                Article
                10.2307/1369960
                14842f6f-6869-4f2c-be12-a07d80fc3459
                © 1997
                History

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