Previous studies suggest that extrapair young are very rare or absent in socially monogamous avian species that produce vocal
duets. These results are generally consistent with functional hypotheses suggesting that duets may signal commitment between
partners, or aid males as a paternity guard to ensure genetic as well as social monogamy. Additionally, species that exhibit
social monogamy with the same partner across multiple breeding seasons tend to exhibit low levels of extrapair paternity,
so duetting species that mate for life may be particularly likely to exhibit genetic monogamy. This study examined the social
and genetic mating systems of California towhees (
Pipilo crissalis), a duetting species thought to have life-long pair bonds. Observation of a color-banded population confirmed that California
towhees exhibit long-term social monogamy. Known social families were genotyped at four microsatellite loci with high allelic
diversity. Unexpectedly, paternity exclusion indicated that at least 13 of 31 (42%) nests contained extrapair young. All chicks
exhibited maternal alleles, but 21 of 81 (26%) young were not the offspring of social fathers. Thus, in contrast to previous
work, this study documents high frequencies of extrapair young among socially monogamous duetting birds with long-term pair
bonds.
Keywords Extrapair paternity - Mating systems - Vocal duets - California towhee -
Pipilo crissalis
Communicated by S. Pruett-Jones