Data from: Extra-pair mating in a socially monogamous and paternal mouthbrooding cardinalfish

Abstract [Related Publication]:

Many vertebrates form monogamous pairs to mate and care for their offspring. However, genetic tools have increasingly shown that many offspring arise from matings outside of the monogamous pair bond. Social monogamy is relatively common in coral reef fishes, but there have been relatively few studies that have confirmed monogamy or extra-pair reproduction, either for males or females. Here long-term observations and genetic tools were applied to examine the parentage of embryos in a paternally mouthbrooding cardinalfish, Sphaeramia nematoptera. Paternal care in fishes, such as mouth brooding, is thought to be associated with a high degree of confidence in paternity. Two-years of observations confirmed that S. nematoptera form long-term pair bonds within larger groups. However, genetic parentage revealed extra-pair mating by both sexes. Of 105 broods analysed from 64 males, 30.1% were mothered by a female that was not the partner and 11.5% of broods included eggs from two females. Despite the high paternal investment associated with mouthbrooding, 7.5% of broods were fertilised by two males. Extra-pair matings appeared to be opportunistic encounters with individuals from outside the immediate group. We argue that while pair formation contributes to group cohesion, both males and females can maximise lifetime reproductive success by taking advantage of extra-pair mating opportunities. The results contradict the theory that paternal care is associated with a high confidence in paternity.

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    Data Record Details
    Data record related to this publication Data from: Extra-pair mating in a socially monogamous and paternal mouthbrooding cardinalfish
    Data Publication title Data from: Extra-pair mating in a socially monogamous and paternal mouthbrooding cardinalfish
  • Description

    Abstract [Related Publication]:

    Many vertebrates form monogamous pairs to mate and care for their offspring. However, genetic tools have increasingly shown that many offspring arise from matings outside of the monogamous pair bond. Social monogamy is relatively common in coral reef fishes, but there have been relatively few studies that have confirmed monogamy or extra-pair reproduction, either for males or females. Here long-term observations and genetic tools were applied to examine the parentage of embryos in a paternally mouthbrooding cardinalfish, Sphaeramia nematoptera. Paternal care in fishes, such as mouth brooding, is thought to be associated with a high degree of confidence in paternity. Two-years of observations confirmed that S. nematoptera form long-term pair bonds within larger groups. However, genetic parentage revealed extra-pair mating by both sexes. Of 105 broods analysed from 64 males, 30.1% were mothered by a female that was not the partner and 11.5% of broods included eggs from two females. Despite the high paternal investment associated with mouthbrooding, 7.5% of broods were fertilised by two males. Extra-pair matings appeared to be opportunistic encounters with individuals from outside the immediate group. We argue that while pair formation contributes to group cohesion, both males and females can maximise lifetime reproductive success by taking advantage of extra-pair mating opportunities. The results contradict the theory that paternal care is associated with a high confidence in paternity.

    Usage Notes [Dryad]:

  • Other Descriptors
    • Descriptor
      This dataset was originally published on Dryad and should be cited as: Rueger, Theresa et al. (2019), Data from: Extra-pair mating in a socially monogamous and paternal mouthbrooding cardinalfish, Dryad, Dataset, https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.557br15
    • Descriptor type Note
  • Data type dataset
  • Keywords
    • extra-pair mating
    • monogamy
    • mouthbrooding
    • multiple paternity
    • parental care
    • Sphaeramia nematoptera
    • ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies
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    • -
  • Research themes
    Tropical Ecosystems, Conservation and Climate Change
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  • Locations
    • West New Britain, Papua New Guinea
    Data Locations

    Type Location Notes
    URL https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.557br15
    The Data Manager is: Theresa Rueger
    College or Centre ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies
    Access conditions Open: free access under license
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  • Data record size 2 files: 497 KB
  • Related publications
      Name Rueger, Theresa, Harrison, Hugo B., Gardiner, Naomi M., Berumen, Michael L., and Jones, Geoffrey P. (2019) Extra‐pair mating in a socially monogamous and paternal mouth‐brooding cardinalfish. Molecular Ecology, 28 (10). pp. 2625-2635.
    • URL https://doi.org/10.1111/mec.15103
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    The data will be licensed under
  • Other Licence Licensed under a CCO 1.0 Universal (CCO 1.0) Public Domain Dedication license: https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
  • Statement of rights in data Data is freely available from Dryad under a CCO 1.0 license
  • Data owners
      James Cook University
    Citation Rueger, Theresa; Harrison, Hugo; Gardiner, Naomi; Jones, Geoffrey; Berumen, Michael (2021): Data from: Extra-pair mating in a socially monogamous and paternal mouthbrooding cardinalfish. James Cook University. https://research.jcu.edu.au/data/published/e497d905f7d1fad219fa65933f18c85d