Sex-biased help and possible facultative control over offspring sex ratio in the Rufous-fronted Thornbird, Phacellodomus rufifrons Beatriz A. Ribeiro 1 , Lucas A. Carrara 1 , Fabrício R. Santos 1 and Marcos Rodrigues 2 Departamento de Biologia Geral, ICB, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Brasil. Departamento de Zoologia, ICB, Caixa Postal 486, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, 31270‑901, Belo Horizonte, MG, Brasil. E‑mail: ornito@icb.ufmg.br Recebido em 17 de dezembro de 2006; aceito em 29 de dezembro de 2007. REsUMo: Possível controle facultativo na razão sexual de ajudantes no joão-graveto, Phacellodomus rufifrons. Foi examinada a estrutura social e a demografia de uma população de joão‑graveto Phacellodomus rufifrons, uma espécie de furnarídeo que exibe reprodução cooperativa. Foram estudados aspectos potencialmente associados aos mecanismos seletivos que caracterizam a reprodução cooperativa: a origem do sexo dos ajudantes, a razão sexual de jovens e adultos e os padrões de dispersão de cada sexo. o trabalho foi feito no Parque Nacional da serra do Cipó, estado de Minas Gerais no sudeste do Brasil. Foram monitoradas oito a 10 famílias entre os anos de 2000 e 2003 em uma área de cerrado de aproximadamente 80 ha. Amostras de tecido sanguíneo foram coletadas nos indivíduos marcados com anilhas coloridas. Foi aplicada a técnica molecular para determinar o sexo dos filhotes e adultos, uma vez que o dimorfismo sexual é ausente nesta espécie. A população estudada apresenta reprodução cooperativa de parentesco, com grupos sociais compostos de um casal reprodutor e seus filhotes que prorrogam a dispersão. o comportamento de ajuda foi detectado principalmente entre os jovens machos. As fêmeas jovens tendem a dispersar antes, permanecendo no território natal por não mais que um ano. os machos jovens prorrogam a dispersão, permanecendo nos territórios natais por pelo menos três anos. A razão sexual desviada a machos resulta principalmente da tendenciosidade do recrutamento de jovens. A primeira ninhada de casais reprodutores é tendenciosa em relação a machos, o sexo ajudante. Estas descobertas sugerem que as fêmeas de P. rufifrons podem estar exibindo controle facultativo sobre a razão sexual dos seus filhotes. PAlAvRAs‑CHAvE: Cuidado parental, dispersão tardia, filopatria, reprodução cooperativa, suboscines. ABstRACt: We examined the social structure and demography of a cooperative breeding population of the Rufous‑fronted thornbird Phacellodomus rufifrons, a neotropical ovenbird that inhabits open scrublands in south America. We focused on aspects potentially associated with the selective mechanisms underlying cooperative breeding: the origin and sex of helpers, the sex ratio of young and adult population, and the dispersal patterns of young of each sex. the study was conducted at ‘Parque Nacional da serra do Cipó’, a natural reserve in southeastern Brazil. Eight to ten social groups were monitored on a scrubland area of about 80 ha, during 2000‑2003. Individuals were color‑banded and blood or feather shafts were sampled. Molecular techniques were used to determine the sex of adult and fledgling, as sexual dimorphism is absent in the species. Kin‑based cooperative breeding occurs, with social groups composed of a breeding pair and offspring that delayed dispersal. Help was mainly due to young males. Female offspring tended to disperse earlier and remain in the natal territory up to one year, while males, delayed dispersal for up to three years. sex ratio skews towards male in the adult population resulted mainly from biases in the sex ratio of recruited young. the first brood of breeding pairs was biased towards males, the helper sex. our findings suggest that Rufous‑fronted thornbird female may exhibit facultative control of offspring sex ratio. KEy‑WoRDs: Cooperative breeding delayed dispersal, parental care, philopatry, suboscines. 1. 2. sex ratio gives support to the local resource enhancement hypothesis (review in Komdeur 1996), which predicts biases in offspring sex ratio when one sex contributes more to the parental fitness through the helping behavior. the Rufous‑fronted thornbird Phacellodomus rufifrons, an endemic neotropical Furnariidae (ovenbird) is a cooperative breeder, where more individuals than just the breeding pair helps in territory maintenance, nest building and feeding the nestling (Rodrigues and Carrara 2004). Here, we investigate the structure of cooperative breeding system and demography of the population studied by Rodrigues and Carrara (2004). We focused on those aspects of greater relevance to understanding the mechanisms of expression or maintenance of cooperative breeding in this species, namely: 1. the sex and origin of help‑ ers: is one sex more prone to help than the other, and is helping behavior expressed by retained offspring only? 2. Dispersal behavior of young: do male and female offspring have similar Cooperative breeding occurs whenever more than two indivi‑ duals help rear the offspring of one pair (Emlen and vehren‑ camp 1985), and has been reported for 308 bird species across 27 families, accounting for ~3% of all 9672 bird species described (Arnold and owens 1998). Despite this generally accepted definition, cooperative breeding includes a diverse array of mating and social systems (ligon and Burt 2004). A general observation in cooperative species is that one sex usually helps more than the other (Cockburn 1998). Help‑ ing is often expressed by sons (Emlen 1997, Ewen et al. 2001), but may also be exhibited predominantly by daughters or by both sexes (see references in Cockburn 2004). sex ratio biases towards the sex that helps to rear offspring were previously reported for cooperative breeders such as the red‑cockaded woodpecker (Picoides borealis) (Gowaty and lennartz 1985) and the seychelles warbler (Acrocephalus sechellensis) (Kom‑ deur 1996, Komdeur et al. 1997). the control over offspring Revista Brasileira de Ornitologia 15(4):561-568 dezembro de 2007 ARtIGo