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Incubation temperature influences survival in a small passerine bird

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TLDR
The results show that incubation temperature in birds, and thus parental incubation behaviour, play an important role in shaping the life-history trajectories of offspring.
Abstract
In birds parental incubation behaviour is an important factor shaping the environmental conditions under which the embryos develop, and sub-optimal incubation temperatures are known to negatively affect early growth and development. It is less well known if variation in incubation temperature can impose life-long differences in individual performance and survival. In the present study we investigated the effects of incubation temperature on long-term survival in a small passerine bird. Using our captive population of the zebra finch Taeniopygia guttata we artificially incubated eggs at three biologically relevant temperatures (35.9, 37.0 and 37.9°C) for two-thirds of the incubation period and then monitored individual lifespan of the hatched chicks for two and a half years. We found that individuals from eggs incubated under the lowest temperature exhibited significantly lower long-term survival compared to those which had been incubated at the highest temperature. Our results show that incubation temperature in birds, and thus parental incubation behaviour, play an important role in shaping the life-history trajectories of offspring.

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Citations
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Experimentally increased nest temperature affects body temperature, growth and apparent survival in blue tit nestlings

TL;DR: This study studied how experimentally increased T n affected T b in 8–12 d old blue tit Cyanistes caeruleus nestlings to investigate if increased thermoregulatory demands to maintain normothermic T b influenced nestling growth and apparent long-term survival.
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Long-term consequences of high incubation temperature in a wild bird population

TL;DR: High incubation temperature can be beneficial in the short term, but costs of accelerated embryonic development may equal those of protracted development in the long term because hidden consequences of faster development could maintain natural selection for average incubationTemperature.
Journal ArticleDOI

Lifelong Effects of Thermal Challenges During Development in Birds and Mammals.

TL;DR: There is a pressing need to understand better how developmental temperature impacts thermoregulatory responses to matched and mismatched thermal challenges in subsequent life stages to facilitate or constrain thermal adaptation over a lifetime.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nest microclimate during incubation affects posthatching development and parental care in wild birds.

TL;DR: The results suggest that increasing temperatures may affect fitness in wild populations in species-specific ways, and induce life-history changes including the classic trade-off parents face between the size and number of offspring.
Journal ArticleDOI

Embryonic growth rate affects telomere attrition: an experiment in a wild bird

TL;DR: Investigating whether embryonic growth rate, manipulated using incubation temperature, affects erythrocyte telomere length in a wild bird species, the common tern, suggests that an effect of growth rate on lifespan may be mediated byTelomere dynamics or a physiological process reflected by telomeres length.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Compensation for a bad start: grow now, pay later?

TL;DR: It is suggested that, although compensatory growth can bring quick benefits, it is also associated with a surprising variety of costs that are often not evident until much later in adult life.
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Early development and fitness in birds and mammals

TL;DR: Conditions experienced during early development affect survival and reproductive performance in many bird and mammal species and have an important influence both on the optimization of life histories and on population dynamics.
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Thermal Tolerance of Avian Embryos: A Review

TL;DR: Both the optimal temperature for continuous exposure and the range of temperatures producing high survivorship differ among species, and the use of a "physiological zero" applicable to all species is not warranted.
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Parental effects in ecology and evolution: mechanisms, processes, and implications

TL;DR: It is suggested that by emphasizing the complexity of causes and influences in developmental systems and by making explicit the links between development, natural selection and inheritance, the study of parental effects enables deeper understanding of developmental dynamics of life cycles and provides a unique opportunity to explicitly integrate development and evolution.
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Experimental cooling during incubation leads to reduced innate immunity and body condition in nestling tree swallows

TL;DR: The results indicate that environmental conditions and trade-offs experienced during one stage of development can have important carry-over effects on later life-history stages.
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