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Welcome to the American Ornithological Society 2018 Annual Conference. We are pleased to have you join us at the lovely Hilton El Conquistador Resort in Tucson, AZ. 
Thursday, April 12 • 2:15pm - 2:30pm
Extrapair parentage in a rapidly moving chickadee hybrid zone: confounding factor for analysis of fitness consequences of interbreeding?

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In songbirds that hybridize, extrapair parentage may confound analysis of key fitness consequences such as hatching success if the species-level genotypes of extrapair parents differ from those of social parents. Our research on black-capped and Carolina chickadees in southeastern Pennsylvania has revealed rapid northward hybrid zone movement associated with climate change; hatching success has changed correspondingly, with fewer eggs hatching in populations experiencing interbreeding, but whether the patterns are obscured by extrapair parentage is unknown. Using eight species-diagnostic single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) markers, we genotyped 54 breeders and 137 nestlings from 30 nests over 2 years in one hybrid-zone population (at Hawk Mountain Sanctuary) and conducted parentage analysis to identify extrapair offspring (EPO). At least 30\% of nestlings had genotypes that could not be explained by those of their social parents and were therefore EPO, even though species-diagnostic SNPs yield low detection power. Initial analyses suggest a potential relationship between hatching success and \%EPO in a nest. Therefore, extrapair mating does potentially confound analysis of hatching success at Hawk Mountain. Work in progress focuses on using these results to refine analysis of hatching success in this hybrid-zone population.

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Thursday April 12, 2018 2:15pm - 2:30pm MST
Agave II-III