信頼できるつがいがいない場合の鳥類の行動を解明(Study Reveals That Without a Reliable Mate Birds Do What Comes Naturally)

2026-06-01 スウォンジー大学

英国スウォンジー大学の研究チームは、長期的なつがい関係を形成する海鳥を対象に、繁殖成功とパートナーの信頼性との関係を調査した。その結果、前年の繁殖で同じ相手との協力がうまく機能しなかった場合や、相手の帰還が不確実な場合、個体は新たな配偶者を探す傾向が強まることを明らかにした。一方で、信頼できるパートナーとの繁殖経験がある場合には、同じ相手との関係維持が優先されることも確認された。研究は、鳥類の配偶行動が単純な本能だけで決まるのではなく、過去の繁殖成果や相手の行動履歴に基づく柔軟な意思決定によって調整されていることを示している。さらに、環境変動や個体数減少によってつがい形成の機会が変化すると、繁殖戦略や個体群動態にも影響が及ぶ可能性が示唆された。本成果は、動物の社会行動や繁殖戦略の進化的理解を深めるとともに、野生生物の保全や個体群管理にも有用な知見を提供するものである。

<関連情報>

鳥類における自慰行為の進化 The Evolution of Masturbation in Birds

Chloe Heys, Kevin Arbuckle, Matilda Brindle, Tom A. R. Price

Ecology and Evolution  Published: 31 May 2026

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.73693

信頼できるつがいがいない場合の鳥類の行動を解明(Study Reveals That Without a Reliable Mate Birds Do What Comes Naturally)

ABSTRACT

Most theories on sexual behaviours are based on adaptive explanations. However, masturbation, a common but scarcely discussed sexual behaviour, appears a Darwinian puzzle. Why would individuals waste valuable resources such as time, energy and, for males, sperm? We combined targeted surveys with information from published accounts to test hypotheses about why masturbation occurs, using a phylogenetically broad dataset on the presence or absence of masturbation across 120 bird species. We find masturbation is widespread in birds, but strongly phylogenetically conserved, typically being fixed (as present or absent) or nearly so within broad clades. Masturbation is more common in males, though the widespread evidence for masturbation in females suggests that maintaining fresh sperm in testes cannot be the single explanation. We find no difference in masturbation occurrence between juveniles and adults, further suggesting that it does not solely represent practice copulations before maturity. Species with indiscriminate matings are more likely to masturbate than socially monogamous species or species with long-term pair bonds. Importantly, as masturbation is more commonly reported in wild than captive birds, we find it is therefore not a negative or maladaptive response to captivity. Instead, it is part of a wider repertoire of sexual behaviours exhibited in birds. Overall, our data are consistent with masturbation serving as an outlet for increased sexual arousal, a means of increasing reproductive success through postcopulatory selection, or both.

1903自然環境保全
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