Breeding Season Cheats -

The breeding season doesn’t belong to the faithful. It belongs to the clever.

By J. S. Moraine

And yet cheating persists. That’s evolution’s quiet verdict: the benefits, on average, outweigh the costs. A male who raises two of his own offspring plus one fathered by a rival has lost a little. A male who sneaks and fathers two offspring without raising any has won big. The math favors the bold. We hesitate to write about this without glancing at ourselves. Humans are not fairy-wrens. But we are primates with pair bonds, concealed ovulation (rare among animals), and a long history of extra-pair paternity studies. Globally, rates of “non-paternity events” average around 1–3% in most modern populations—far lower than in many “monogamous” birds. But in certain historical or small-scale societies, it has ranged higher. breeding season cheats

is small, unornamented, and fast. In salmon, bluegill sunfish, and many frogs, “jack” males don’t grow large or develop bright breeding colors. They hide near spawning grounds, then dart in to release sperm just as the female spawns with a dominant male. The dominant male invests in fighting; the Sneaker invests in timing . One study found that 40% of female salmon’s eggs were fertilized by sneakers they never saw. The breeding season doesn’t belong to the faithful