Experimental Study of Social Signaling through Delayed Plumage Maturation in a Colony-Nesting Seabird

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Abstract

Delayed development is a widespread evolutionary strategy that can reduce competition among highly social animals. Many seabirds exhibit delayed plumage maturation, in which young birds spend years in visually distinct predefinitive plumages before attaining the definitive plumage of adults. Previous work hypothesized that predefinitive plumages may function to reduce aggression towards young, predefinitive seabirds at breeding colonies, an idea known from other lineages of birds as the status signaling hypothesis. We tested this hypothesis with visual stimulus experiments at a breeding colony of American Herring Gulls ( Larus smithsonianus ). We presented painted models of four diYerent plumage classes (first-cycle predefinitive gull plumage, third-cycle predefinitive gull plumage, definitive gull plumage, and a Canada Goose as a control) and measured the aggressive responses of breeding adults at their nests. Breeding gulls responded with significantly less frequent, lower, and slower aggression toward the first-cycle and control plumages compared to the definitive plumage. There were no significant diYerences in response towards the third-cycle plumage. These results oYer support for a status signaling hypothesis, indicating that substantial, mottled brown plumage—as worn by first-cycle gulls—reduces aggression from breeding adults in colonies or foraging flocks. Future research can investigate how immature seabirds—including third-cycle gulls—may combine plumage, posture, and behavior to shift the dynamics of social behavior at breeding colonies.

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