Data from: Nest attentiveness drives nest predation in arctic sandpipers

Most birds incubate their eggs to allow embryo development. This behaviour limits the ability of adults to perform other activities. Hence, incubating adults trade-off incubation and nest protection with foraging to meet their own needs. Parents can either cooperate to sustain this trade-off or incu...

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Main Authors: Meyer, Nicolas, Bollache, Loïc, Dechaume-Moncharmont, François-Xavier, Moreau, Jerôme, Afonso, Eve, Angerbjörn, Anders, Bety, Joël, Ehrich, Dorothee, Gilg, Vladimir, Giroux, Marie-Andrée, Hansen, Jannik, Lanctot, Richard, Lang, Johannes, Lecomte, Nicolas, McKinnon, Laura, Reneerkens, Jeroen, Saalfeld, Sarah, Sabard, Brigitte, Schmidt, Niels, Sittler, Benoît, Smith, Paul, Sokolov, Aleksandr, Sokolov, Vasiliy, Sokolova, Natalya, van Bemmelen, Rob, Gilg, Olivier
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://zenodo.org/record/3962857
https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.0rxwdbrx2
id ftzenodo:oai:zenodo.org:3962857
record_format openpolar
spelling ftzenodo:oai:zenodo.org:3962857 2023-05-15T14:53:00+02:00 Data from: Nest attentiveness drives nest predation in arctic sandpipers Meyer, Nicolas Bollache, Loïc Dechaume-Moncharmont, François-Xavier Moreau, Jerôme Afonso, Eve Angerbjörn, Anders Bety, Joël Ehrich, Dorothee Gilg, Vladimir Giroux, Marie-Andrée Hansen, Jannik Lanctot, Richard Lang, Johannes Lecomte, Nicolas McKinnon, Laura Reneerkens, Jeroen Saalfeld, Sarah Sabard, Brigitte Schmidt, Niels Sittler, Benoît Smith, Paul Sokolov, Aleksandr Sokolov, Vasiliy Sokolova, Natalya van Bemmelen, Rob Gilg, Olivier 2020-07-20 https://zenodo.org/record/3962857 https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.0rxwdbrx2 unknown doi:10.1111/oik.07311 https://zenodo.org/communities/dryad https://zenodo.org/record/3962857 https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.0rxwdbrx2 oai:zenodo.org:3962857 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode nest survival breeding behaviour incubation strategy incubation recesses Arctic shorebirds info:eu-repo/semantics/other dataset 2020 ftzenodo https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.0rxwdbrx210.1111/oik.07311 2023-03-10T18:36:06Z Most birds incubate their eggs to allow embryo development. This behaviour limits the ability of adults to perform other activities. Hence, incubating adults trade-off incubation and nest protection with foraging to meet their own needs. Parents can either cooperate to sustain this trade-off or incubate alone. The main cause of reproductive failure at this reproductive stage is predation and adults reduce this risk by keeping the nest location secret. Arctic sandpipers are interesting biological models to investigate parental care evolution as they may use several parental care strategies. The three main incubation strategies include both parents sharing incubation duties ("biparental"), one parent incubating alone ("uniparental"), or a flexible strategy with both uniparental and biparental incubation within a population ("mixed"). By monitoring the incubation behaviour in 714 nests of seven sandpiper species across 12 arctic sites, we studied the relationship between incubation strategy and nest predation. First, we described how the frequency of incubation recesses (NR), their mean duration (MDR), and the daily total duration of recesses (TDR) vary among strategies. Then, we examined how the relationship between the daily predation rate and these components of incubation behaviour varies across strategies using two complementary survival analysis. For uniparental and biparental species, the daily predation rate increased with the daily total duration of recesses and with the mean duration of recesses. In contrast, daily predation rate increased with the daily number of recesses for biparental species only. These patterns may be attributed to two independent mechanisms: cryptic incubating adults are more difficult to locate than unattended nests and adults departing the nest or feeding close to the nest can draw predators' attention. Our results demonstrate that incubation behaviour as mediated by incubation strategy has important consequences for sandpipers' reproductive success. This dataset contains the ... Dataset Arctic Zenodo Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Zenodo
op_collection_id ftzenodo
language unknown
topic nest survival
breeding behaviour
incubation strategy
incubation recesses
Arctic shorebirds
spellingShingle nest survival
breeding behaviour
incubation strategy
incubation recesses
Arctic shorebirds
Meyer, Nicolas
Bollache, Loïc
Dechaume-Moncharmont, François-Xavier
Moreau, Jerôme
Afonso, Eve
Angerbjörn, Anders
Bety, Joël
Ehrich, Dorothee
Gilg, Vladimir
Giroux, Marie-Andrée
Hansen, Jannik
Lanctot, Richard
Lang, Johannes
Lecomte, Nicolas
McKinnon, Laura
Reneerkens, Jeroen
Saalfeld, Sarah
Sabard, Brigitte
Schmidt, Niels
Sittler, Benoît
Smith, Paul
Sokolov, Aleksandr
Sokolov, Vasiliy
Sokolova, Natalya
van Bemmelen, Rob
Gilg, Olivier
Data from: Nest attentiveness drives nest predation in arctic sandpipers
topic_facet nest survival
breeding behaviour
incubation strategy
incubation recesses
Arctic shorebirds
description Most birds incubate their eggs to allow embryo development. This behaviour limits the ability of adults to perform other activities. Hence, incubating adults trade-off incubation and nest protection with foraging to meet their own needs. Parents can either cooperate to sustain this trade-off or incubate alone. The main cause of reproductive failure at this reproductive stage is predation and adults reduce this risk by keeping the nest location secret. Arctic sandpipers are interesting biological models to investigate parental care evolution as they may use several parental care strategies. The three main incubation strategies include both parents sharing incubation duties ("biparental"), one parent incubating alone ("uniparental"), or a flexible strategy with both uniparental and biparental incubation within a population ("mixed"). By monitoring the incubation behaviour in 714 nests of seven sandpiper species across 12 arctic sites, we studied the relationship between incubation strategy and nest predation. First, we described how the frequency of incubation recesses (NR), their mean duration (MDR), and the daily total duration of recesses (TDR) vary among strategies. Then, we examined how the relationship between the daily predation rate and these components of incubation behaviour varies across strategies using two complementary survival analysis. For uniparental and biparental species, the daily predation rate increased with the daily total duration of recesses and with the mean duration of recesses. In contrast, daily predation rate increased with the daily number of recesses for biparental species only. These patterns may be attributed to two independent mechanisms: cryptic incubating adults are more difficult to locate than unattended nests and adults departing the nest or feeding close to the nest can draw predators' attention. Our results demonstrate that incubation behaviour as mediated by incubation strategy has important consequences for sandpipers' reproductive success. This dataset contains the ...
format Dataset
author Meyer, Nicolas
Bollache, Loïc
Dechaume-Moncharmont, François-Xavier
Moreau, Jerôme
Afonso, Eve
Angerbjörn, Anders
Bety, Joël
Ehrich, Dorothee
Gilg, Vladimir
Giroux, Marie-Andrée
Hansen, Jannik
Lanctot, Richard
Lang, Johannes
Lecomte, Nicolas
McKinnon, Laura
Reneerkens, Jeroen
Saalfeld, Sarah
Sabard, Brigitte
Schmidt, Niels
Sittler, Benoît
Smith, Paul
Sokolov, Aleksandr
Sokolov, Vasiliy
Sokolova, Natalya
van Bemmelen, Rob
Gilg, Olivier
author_facet Meyer, Nicolas
Bollache, Loïc
Dechaume-Moncharmont, François-Xavier
Moreau, Jerôme
Afonso, Eve
Angerbjörn, Anders
Bety, Joël
Ehrich, Dorothee
Gilg, Vladimir
Giroux, Marie-Andrée
Hansen, Jannik
Lanctot, Richard
Lang, Johannes
Lecomte, Nicolas
McKinnon, Laura
Reneerkens, Jeroen
Saalfeld, Sarah
Sabard, Brigitte
Schmidt, Niels
Sittler, Benoît
Smith, Paul
Sokolov, Aleksandr
Sokolov, Vasiliy
Sokolova, Natalya
van Bemmelen, Rob
Gilg, Olivier
author_sort Meyer, Nicolas
title Data from: Nest attentiveness drives nest predation in arctic sandpipers
title_short Data from: Nest attentiveness drives nest predation in arctic sandpipers
title_full Data from: Nest attentiveness drives nest predation in arctic sandpipers
title_fullStr Data from: Nest attentiveness drives nest predation in arctic sandpipers
title_full_unstemmed Data from: Nest attentiveness drives nest predation in arctic sandpipers
title_sort data from: nest attentiveness drives nest predation in arctic sandpipers
publishDate 2020
url https://zenodo.org/record/3962857
https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.0rxwdbrx2
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
op_relation doi:10.1111/oik.07311
https://zenodo.org/communities/dryad
https://zenodo.org/record/3962857
https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.0rxwdbrx2
oai:zenodo.org:3962857
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.0rxwdbrx210.1111/oik.07311
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