Bi-parental care Bi-parental care is the most common form in birds, especially in passerines. A mating pair equally contributes to feeding and guarding the offspring. It occurs in approximately 85% of bird species. The hatchling benefits from the mutual care at the cost of the parents' future reproductive success. Each parent tries to find a mate who will not desert the nest and has high qualities that showcase their parental skills (e.g. ornamental cues). The good parent hypothesis states that birds can invest more energy towards their own survival rate by choosing an ideal mate. Evolution in potential mates to advertise their parental strengths through ornamental cues (e.g. a yellow chest patch in Iberian
rock sparrows) are based on the differential allocation hypothesis. This hypothesis states that the bigger the ornamental cue a mate has, the more investment is put towards the offspring. As a result of bi-parental care, the offspring are usually stronger than birds which are only cared for by one parent in Iberian rock sparrows. (Vicente García-Navas)
Maternal vs paternal care In bi-parental care, the male provides food and the female is a caretaker. Both ensure the survival of the offspring. The female may care for her young by covering them to keep them warm, shielding them from the sun or from rain and guarding them from predation. The male may also feed the female, who in turn regurgitates the food to the chicks. In female
red-eyed vireos the roles are reversed. Nonbreeding adults or juveniles in
acorn woodpeckers contribute the care through collaboration with the parents. (
Paul R. Ehrlich, David S. Dobkin, and Darryl Wheye)
Mono-parental care Male only care occurs in only 1% of bird species (approximately 90 species). Female only care occurs in 8% of species (approximately 772 species). (Andrew Cockburn) A hypothesis states that the parent that invests less reproductive effort in comparison to its mate, will have a higher chance of deserting because it loses less if successful offspring are not produced. However, in some birds (such as the
snail kite found in South America, the Caribbean and Florida), the male and the female sometimes compete over which one will desert the nest regardless of which one has invested more into the reproductive effort. (Robert Trivers (1972))
Parental care in polyandrous species , a polyandrous species.
Polyandry care occurs in roughly 9% of bird species (approximately 852 species). (Andrew Cockburn) ==Factors affecting parental care==