Data from: The pyriform egg of the Common Murre (Uria aalge) is more stable on sloping surfaces ...

The adaptive significance of avian egg shape is a long-standing problem in biology. For many years, it was widely believed that the pyriform shape of the Common Murre (Uria aalge) egg allowed it to either “spin like a top” or “roll in an arc,” thereby reducing its risk of rolling off the breeding le...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Birkhead, Tim R., Thompson, Jamie E., Montgomerie, Robert
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: Dryad 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.gb90p1c
https://datadryad.org/stash/dataset/doi:10.5061/dryad.gb90p1c
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Summary:The adaptive significance of avian egg shape is a long-standing problem in biology. For many years, it was widely believed that the pyriform shape of the Common Murre (Uria aalge) egg allowed it to either “spin like a top” or “roll in an arc,” thereby reducing its risk of rolling off the breeding ledge. There is no evidence in support of either mechanism. Two recent alternative hypotheses suggest that a pyriform egg confers mechanical strength and minimizes the risk of dirt contamination of the blunt end. We present a new hypothesis: that the Common Murre egg's pyriform shape confers stability on the breeding ledge, thus reducing the chance that it will begin to roll. We tested this hypothesis by measuring the stability of Common Murre and Razorbill (Alca torda) eggs of different shapes on slopes of 20°, 30°, and 40° above the horizontal. Common Murre eggs were more stable, and easier to stabilize, than the more elliptical Razorbill eggs. Within Common Murre eggs, more pyriform eggs were more stable. From a ... : READMEstabilityRcodeR notebook used to generate the Statistical SupplementStatistical SupplementThis is the Rcode and output from that code for the statistical analyses reported in this paper.StatisticalSupplement.pdfComparing stability on different slopesThis is the dataset from slope trials done by Jamie Thompson (JET) alone, to assess his ability to stabilize Razorbill and Common Murre eggs of different shapes on flat, sandpaper covered slopes of 20°, 30° and 40° above the horizontal.stability.csvStatic slopes experiment comparing participantsThis is a dataset to compare the ability of 12 naive subjects with a potentially biased subject (Jamie E Thompson; JET) in their ability to balance Razorbill and Commmon Murre eggs on surfaces with different slopes.studentdata.csvData from moving slopes experimentThis is the dataset from experiments where each egg was placed on a surface then the slope gradually increased until the egg began to roll.dynamictrials.csv ...