Science, asked by Anonymous, 9 hours ago

Many birds are monogamous, meaning that one male and one female mate for an entire breeding season. Other animals are naturally polygamous, meaning one female has the opportunity to mate with many males or one male mates with multiple females. Do you think monogamy and polygamy are reproductive strategies? In terms of species survival, what are the advantages and disadvantages of each method?

Answers

Answered by yadavadityaandgondea
0

Answer:

please give brainlist answer mark if you like it

Explanation:

Why do some animals mate with one partner rather than many? Here, I investigate factors related to (i) spatial constraints (habitat limitation, mate availability), (ii) time constraints (breeding synchrony, length of breeding season), (iii) need for parental care, and (iv) genetic compatibility, to see what support can be found in different taxa regarding the importance of these factors in explaining the occurrence of monogamy, whether shown by one sex (monogyny or monandry) or by both sexes (mutual monogamy). Focusing on reproductive rather than social monogamy whenever possible, I review the empirical literature for birds, mammals and fishes, with occasional examples from other taxa. Each of these factors can explain mating patterns in some taxa, but not in all. In general, there is mixed support for how well the factors listed above predict monogamy. The factor that shows greatest support across taxa is habitat limitation. By contrast, while a need for parental care might explain monogamy in freshwater fishes and birds, there is clear evidence that this is not the case in marine fishes and mammals. Hence, reproductive monogamy does not appear to have a single overriding explanation, but is more taxon specific. Genetic compatibility is a promising avenue for future work likely to improve our understanding of monogamy and other mating patterns.

Answered by tvantine88
0

Answer:

21

Explanation:

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