Incubation Patterns in a Central-Place Forager Affect Lifetime Reproductive Success: Scaling of Patterns from a Foraging Bout to a Lifetime

Incubation Patterns in a Central-Place Forager Affect Lifetime Reproductive Success: Scaling of Patterns from a Foraging Bout to a Lifetime

Détails

Titre: Incubation Patterns in a Central-Place Forager Affect Lifetime Reproductive Success: Scaling of Patterns from a Foraging Bout to a Lifetime
Auteur: Shoji, Akiko; Elliott, Kyle H.; Aris-Brosou, Stephane; Crump, Doug; Gaston, Antony J.
Résumé: Background: Long-lived seabirds face a conflict between current and lifelong reproductive success. During incubation shifts, egg neglect is sometimes necessary to avoid starvation, but may compromise the current reproductive attempt. However, factors underlying this decision process are poorly understood. We focus on the ancient murrelet, Synthliboramphus antiquus, an alcid with exceptionally long incubation shift lengths, and test the impact of environmental factors on incubation shift length in relation to reproductive success. Methodology/Principal Findings: Using an information theoretic approach, we show that incubation shift length was a strong predictor of reproductive success for ancient murrelets at Reef Island, Haida Gwaii, British Columbia, Canada during the 2007 and 2008 breeding seasons. The most important factors explaining an individual’s shift length were egg size, wind speed and the length of the mate’s previous shift. Wind speed and tide height were the two most important factors for determining foraging behavior, as measured by dive frequency and depth. Conclusions/Significance: Our study demonstrates that (i) species-specific reproductive strategies interact with environmental conditions such as wind speed to form multiple incubation patterns and (ii) maintaining regular incubation shifts is an essential component of reproductive success.
Date: 2011
URI: http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi/10.1371/journal.pone.0017760
http://hdl.handle.net/10393/19848

Fichier(s) constituant ce document :

Fichier(s) Taille Format
Shoji.etal_2011_PLoSone_e17760.pdf 352.3Kb application/pdf Voir/Ouvrir

Cet article est disponible dans les collections suivantes

Détails


Nos coordonnées

Pavillon Morisset (carte)
65, rue Université
Ottawa ON Canada
K1N 6N5

Tél. 613-562-5800 (4563)
Fax 613-562-5195

ruor@uottawa.ca