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Journal ArticleDOI

Seasonal declines in reproductive success of the common tern Sterna hirundo: timing or parental quality?

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TLDR
Differences in chick growth and survival suggest that higher quality adults may be able to compensate for the disadvantages of late hatching dates and achieve similar reproductive success to that of pairs hatching chicks early, as well as supporting the parental quality hypothesis.
Abstract
Reproductive success declines over the course of the breeding season in many bird species. Two categories of hypothesis have been evoked to explain this decline. The “timing” hypothesis suggests that seasonal declines in breeding success are attributable to the date of laying. The “parental quality” hypothesis suggests that seasonal declines result from the fact that young, inexperienced, or low quality birds breed later in the season. To evaluate the relative importance of timing and parental quality, egg exchanges and removals were used to manipulate hatching dates of common terns Sterna hirundo. Indices of quality, attendance, provisioning rates, and reproductive success of birds in three experimental groups (delayed hatch pairs, advanced hatch pairs, and pairs induced to relay) were compared to those of date-matched controls. Pairs that hatched chicks early raised more chicks than pairs hatching chicks late in the season, regardless of initial laying date. This suggests that hatching chicks early is advantageous in itself. Our results, however, also support the parental quality hypothesis. There was a significant negative relationship between natural laying date and fledging success, independent of hatching date. Differences in chick growth and survival suggest that higher quality adults may be able to compensate for the disadvantages of late hatching dates and achieve similar reproductive success to that of pairs hatching chicks early. We found that pairs hatching chicks late in the season were subject to more incidents of kleptoparasitism than those hatching chicks early. This may be a proximate factor contributing to seasonal declines in reproductive success for common terns, although such a mechanism would not be likely in non-colonial species. Failure to control for egg quality may have biased the results of some prior egg exchange experiments. Additionally, altered cost of incubation may be an unavoidable confounding factor in studies designed to manipulate timing of breeding.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The timing of birds' breeding seasons: a review of experiments that manipulated timing of breeding

TL;DR: It is concluded that late pairs are constrained from producing a clutch earlier in the season, presumably by the fitness costs this would entail, and evidence for the date hypothesis leads us to conclude that quality is important for the ability to breed early.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nesting density and reproductive success of piping plovers in response to storm- and human-created habitat changes.

TL;DR: Neither reproductive output nor any of its components were correlated with population density, and reproductive output was correlated between the sites despite their different population trajectories, suggesting that the population was primarily regulated by adult survival, emigration, or immigration.
Journal ArticleDOI

Snake activity affects seasonal variation in nest predation risk for birds

TL;DR: The results indicate that variation in predator behavior can be associated with and potentially cause seasonal changes in nest success, but also that these relationships are species specific even within the same community and may depend on aspects of the nesting ecology of the prey such as nest site selection.
Journal ArticleDOI

A UV signal of offspring condition mediates context-dependent parental favouritism

TL;DR: It is shown in the Alpine swift and the European starling that UV light reflected by the body skin of offspring positively correlates with their stature, and parental favouritism towards young with more UV reflective skin gradually increases as the season progresses.
Journal ArticleDOI

Persistence of forage fish ‘hot spots’ and its association with foraging Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) in southeast Alaska

TL;DR: Using a simple spatial model, it is demonstrated that when the density of these hot spots is low, effort necessary to locate these spots is minimized when those spots persist through time, and under similar prey densities but lower persistence, effort increases dramatically.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The prudent parent: Energetic adjustments in avian breeding

TL;DR: In this paper, the parent adjusts its effort in relation to prevailing environmental conditions in order to maximize the output of young in its lifetime, rather than measurable in terms of adult survival and recruitment of young.
Book

Population Studies of Birds

David Lack
Journal ArticleDOI

The timing of birds‘ breeding seasons

Christopher M. Perrins
- 03 Apr 2008 - 
TL;DR: There is a strong tendency for those young which are hatched earliest in the season to have the greatest chance of surviving to breed, and not all species are likely to be prevented, by food shortage, from breeding at the best time for raising young.
Journal ArticleDOI

Directional selection and the evolution of breeding date in birds

TL;DR: A model is developed that shows how breeding date may have considerable additive genetic variance, appear to be under directional selection, and yet not evolve, and provides a general explanation for a persistent correlation of fitness with a variety of traits in natural populations.
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