Cost of reproduction and allocation of food between parent and young in the swift (Apus apus)

We manipulated brood sizes to promote different levels of parental effort in the common swift (Apus apus). This provided a powerful method for testing hypotheses regarding parental investment decisions concerning optimal allocation strategies between parents and young. Data were analyzed on a visit-...

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Published in:Behavioral Ecology
Main Authors: Martins, Thais L. F., Wright, Jonathan
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Oxford University Press 1993
Subjects:
Online Access:http://beheco.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/short/4/3/213
https://doi.org/10.1093/beheco/4.3.213
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spelling fthighwire:oai:open-archive.highwire.org:beheco:4/3/213 2023-05-15T14:17:13+02:00 Cost of reproduction and allocation of food between parent and young in the swift (Apus apus) Martins, Thais L. F. Wright, Jonathan 1993-01-01 00:00:00.0 text/html http://beheco.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/short/4/3/213 https://doi.org/10.1093/beheco/4.3.213 en eng Oxford University Press http://beheco.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/short/4/3/213 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/beheco/4.3.213 Copyright (C) 1993, International Society for Behavioral Ecology Articles TEXT 1993 fthighwire https://doi.org/10.1093/beheco/4.3.213 2007-06-25T03:05:03Z We manipulated brood sizes to promote different levels of parental effort in the common swift (Apus apus). This provided a powerful method for testing hypotheses regarding parental investment decisions concerning optimal allocation strategies between parents and young. Data were analyzed on a visit-by-visit basis regarding changes in parental and chick body mass, the mass of prey delivered, and the estimated mass of parental self-feeding. Our results were consistent with current theory in that food delivery increased with brood size, whereas the food received per chick, and hence mean chick body mass, decreased with brood size. Parental body mass decreased with brood size and increasing parental effort but recovered quickly during lower levels of chick feeding immediately before fledging, suggesting some short-term cost of reproduction. Parents feeding at the highest level experienced critically low body mass and responded by a temporary cessation of chick feeding. On any one foraging trip, total mass of prey captured did not differ between brood sizes, but load mass delivered to the young was negatively related to the amount of estimated parental self-feeding. Allocation decisions of parents feeding themselves and their young matched differential allocation theories, but estimated provisioning efficiency of parents at different body masses did not suggest any adaptive advantage from parental mass loss. Text Apus apus HighWire Press (Stanford University) Behavioral Ecology 4 3 213 223
institution Open Polar
collection HighWire Press (Stanford University)
op_collection_id fthighwire
language English
topic Articles
spellingShingle Articles
Martins, Thais L. F.
Wright, Jonathan
Cost of reproduction and allocation of food between parent and young in the swift (Apus apus)
topic_facet Articles
description We manipulated brood sizes to promote different levels of parental effort in the common swift (Apus apus). This provided a powerful method for testing hypotheses regarding parental investment decisions concerning optimal allocation strategies between parents and young. Data were analyzed on a visit-by-visit basis regarding changes in parental and chick body mass, the mass of prey delivered, and the estimated mass of parental self-feeding. Our results were consistent with current theory in that food delivery increased with brood size, whereas the food received per chick, and hence mean chick body mass, decreased with brood size. Parental body mass decreased with brood size and increasing parental effort but recovered quickly during lower levels of chick feeding immediately before fledging, suggesting some short-term cost of reproduction. Parents feeding at the highest level experienced critically low body mass and responded by a temporary cessation of chick feeding. On any one foraging trip, total mass of prey captured did not differ between brood sizes, but load mass delivered to the young was negatively related to the amount of estimated parental self-feeding. Allocation decisions of parents feeding themselves and their young matched differential allocation theories, but estimated provisioning efficiency of parents at different body masses did not suggest any adaptive advantage from parental mass loss.
format Text
author Martins, Thais L. F.
Wright, Jonathan
author_facet Martins, Thais L. F.
Wright, Jonathan
author_sort Martins, Thais L. F.
title Cost of reproduction and allocation of food between parent and young in the swift (Apus apus)
title_short Cost of reproduction and allocation of food between parent and young in the swift (Apus apus)
title_full Cost of reproduction and allocation of food between parent and young in the swift (Apus apus)
title_fullStr Cost of reproduction and allocation of food between parent and young in the swift (Apus apus)
title_full_unstemmed Cost of reproduction and allocation of food between parent and young in the swift (Apus apus)
title_sort cost of reproduction and allocation of food between parent and young in the swift (apus apus)
publisher Oxford University Press
publishDate 1993
url http://beheco.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/short/4/3/213
https://doi.org/10.1093/beheco/4.3.213
genre Apus apus
genre_facet Apus apus
op_relation http://beheco.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/short/4/3/213
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/beheco/4.3.213
op_rights Copyright (C) 1993, International Society for Behavioral Ecology
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1093/beheco/4.3.213
container_title Behavioral Ecology
container_volume 4
container_issue 3
container_start_page 213
op_container_end_page 223
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