scholarly journals Covariation of Clutch Size, Laying Date, and Incubation Tendency in the American Kestrel

The Condor ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 103 (3) ◽  
pp. 570-578 ◽  
Author(s):  
Keith W. Sockman ◽  
Hubert Schwabl

Abstract Seasonal decline in clutch size is common in birds, but the proximate mechanisms for this phenomenon have not been elucidated. The most credible model to date posits that late-laying females lay fewer eggs due to a seasonal increase in the tendency to incubate during laying, which inhibits egg production. We tested this model with free-living and laboratory American Kestrels (Falco sparverius) by quantifying changes in clutch size and incubation tendency during laying over the course of the breeding phase. Consistent with the model, clutch size in free-living kestrels decreased while incubation increased with progress of the 74-day breeding phase. Inconsistent with the model, variation in incubation tendency during laying was not associated with clutch size in either the field or the laboratory. In the laboratory, incubation increased but clutch size did not decrease over the course of the 77-day breeding phase. In the laboratory, females that nested early in one breeding phase renested more quickly and nested in a second breeding phase more quickly than females nesting late in the first breeding phase. This indicates that timing of laying is, in part, a property of individual females, independent of environmental factors. Together, our findings suggest that both clutch size and timing of laying are inherent, correlated properties of particular females. Although incubation tendency may influence clutch size, other factors appear to override its influence. Covariación del Tamaño de la Nidada, la Fecha de Postura y la Tendencia de Incubación en Falco sparverius Resumen. Aunque la disminución estacional en el tamaño de la nidada es común entre las aves, los mecanismos proximales para este fenómeno no han sido elucidados. El modelo de mayor credibilidad propuesto hasta el momento sugiere que las hembras que ovipositan tarde ponen menos huevos debido a un aumento estacional en la tendencia a incubar durante la postura que inhibe la producción de huevos. Pusimos a prueba este modelo con individuos de Falco sparverius en condiciones naturales y en cautiverio, cuantificando los cambios en el tamaño de la nidada y la tendencia a incubar durante la postura a lo largo de la época reproductiva. Tal como el modelo plantea, el tamaño de la nidada en individuos silvestres de F. sparverius disminuyó mientras que la incubación aumentó a medida que transcurrían los 74 días de la época de reproducción. Mientras tanto, en contraste con el modelo, la variación en la tendencia a incubar durante la postura no estuvo asociada con el tamaño de la nidada ni en el campo ni en el laboratorio. En el laboratorio, la incubación aumentó pero el tamaño de la nidada no disminuyó en el transcurso de la época reproductiva (77 días). En condiciones de laboratorio, las hembras que anidaron temprano en una fase reproductiva volvieron a anidar más rápidamente en una segunda fase que las hembras que anidaron tarde en la primera. Esto indica que el tiempo en que se hace la postura es en parte una propiedad de cada hembra y es independiente de factores ambientales. En conjunto, nuestros hallazgos sugieren que tanto el tamaño de la nidada como el momento de la postura son propiedades correlacionadas de cada hembra en particular. Aunque la tendencia a incubar podría influenciar el tamaño de la nidada, otros factores parecen anular su influencia.

Behaviour ◽  
1990 ◽  
Vol 114 (1-4) ◽  
pp. 117-136 ◽  
Author(s):  
Serge Daan ◽  
Michael Hall ◽  
Theo Meijer

AbstractThe time in spring when a male kestrel rapidly increases his daily hunting time and his hunting yield, and thereby the amount of food delivered to the female, determines the date when she lays the first egg. Food experiments in free-living and captive kestrels gave a significant advance in laying date. Clutch size, which decreases with progressive laying date, did not change independent of date in response to food manipulation. These effects are in agreement with most other feeding experiments. Photoperiod experiments in kestrels advanced the reproductive cycle in constant long days, and a similar seasonal decline in clutch size was found. It seems that there is an internally preprogrammed decrease in clutch size within an annual "reproductive window". A proximate control model for the seasonal decline of clutch size is proposed, modified from an earlier model by HAFTORN (1985). This incorporates an increasing tendency to incubate the first eggs with progression of the season, an egg contact-incubation positive feedback loop, and the resorption of further follicles in the ovary when the laying female incubates 50% of the time. This follicle resorption fixes the clutch size ca. four days before the last egg is laid. the 50% incubation level is reached earlier in late females and consequently resorption starts earlier and the resulting clutch is smaller than in early females. Experiments in kestrels with removal and addition of eggs, in combination with measurements of incubation behaviour are discussed in relation to the model. Plasma prolactin data of female kestrels show that this hormone is a serious candidate for a physiological component relaying time of year in our model for clutch size regulation.


1992 ◽  
Vol 70 (12) ◽  
pp. 2421-2425 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicholas W. Gard ◽  
David M. Bird

To study factors regulating clutch size in American Kestrels (Falco sparverius), brood manipulation experiments were performed on captive and wild birds in southwestern Quebec during 1986 and 1987. The largest normally occurring brood size was 5 young. Manipulations enlarged or decreased broods to 7 or 2 young, respectively. Significantly more young fledged from wild control and enlarged broods in 1987 than from comparable groups in 1986. The average number of young fledging from enlarged wild broods in 1987 was slightly higher than for control broods, but fledging weight was significantly depressed in enlarged broods. Growth rates and tarsal and antebrachial length at fledging were not affected by brood size, but development of primary feathers was slower in enlarged wild broods. Parental ability to adequately feed all young appears to be the major factor limiting brood size in American Kestrels.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Cynthia Reséndiz-Infante ◽  
Gilles Gauthier

AbstractMany avian migrants have not adjusted breeding phenology to climate warming resulting in negative consequences for their offspring. We studied seasonal changes in reproductive success of the greater snow goose (Anser caerulescens atlantica), a long-distance migrant. As the climate warms and plant phenology advances, the mismatch between the timing of gosling hatch and peak nutritive quality of plants will increase. We predicted that optimal laying date yielding highest reproductive success occurred earlier over time and that the seasonal decline in reproductive success increased. Over 25 years, reproductive success of early breeders increased by 42%, producing a steeper seasonal decline in reproductive success. The difference between the laying date producing highest reproductive success and the median laying date of the population increased, which suggests an increase in the selection pressure for that trait. Observed clutch size was lower than clutch size yielding the highest reproductive success for most laying dates. However, at the individual level, clutch size could still be optimal if the additional time required to acquire nutrients to lay extra eggs is compensated by a reduction in reproductive success due to a delayed laying date. Nonetheless, breeding phenology may not respond sufficiently to meet future environmental changes induced by warming temperatures.


1988 ◽  
Vol 66 (7) ◽  
pp. 1685-1692 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michèle D. Saumier ◽  
Manfred E. Rau ◽  
David M. Bird

Trichinella pseudospiralis infections induced mild behavioural changes in the American kestrel host (Falco sparverius) within the first 5 days postinoculation, a period that corresponds to the adult phase of the infection. However, more severe effects on mobility were precipitated as the larvae migrated and became established in the musculature. The debilitation persisted for at least 5 weeks postinoculation and involved a reduction in exercising, flying, elevated perching, and preening, and was accompanied by an increase in the frequency of walking and floor perching. Such behavioural effects, attributable to the presence of muscle larvae, may reduce the competitive fitness of infected individuals. The muscle larvae were randomly distributed among various muscle groups.


1993 ◽  
Vol 71 (9) ◽  
pp. 1738-1742 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kelvin F. Conrad ◽  
Raleigh J. Robertson

We examined seasonal variation in clutch size among single- and double-brooding eastern phoebes to learn how the pattern of variation among female age-classes and early and late-season breeders contributed to overall seasonal variation in clutch size. Clutch sizes of eastern phoebes did not decline predictably (linearly or quadratically) with season when we considered all clutches laid over the season, nor when the first and second clutches of double-brooding birds were each regarded separately. Total seasonal egg production by double-brooding second-year (SY) females declined linearly with season but that of after-second-year (ASY) females did not. Among single-brooding females, which were nearly all SY birds, clutch size, and hence total seasonal egg production, were unaffected by season. In general, SY birds bred later, laid fewer eggs, and were less likely to double-brood than ASY birds. The large seasonal variation in clutch size for the entire population was influenced by two different groups of SY females: (1) double-brooding SY females that nested at the same time as double-brooding ASY birds and had similar clutch sizes, but showed a linear decrease in total seasonal egg production versus initiation date, and (2) single-brooding SY females that nested after double-brooding females, had clutch sizes similar to double-brooding females, and showed no linear decrease in total seasonal egg production versus initiation date. Combined with double-brooding ASY females, these two groups of SY birds increase the variation in clutch size observed on any given day and obscure the pattern of seasonal decline commonly reported for other species.


Behaviour ◽  
1974 ◽  
Vol 49 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 313-324 ◽  
Author(s):  
Helmut C. Mueller

AbstractNine hand-reared American kestrels were exposed to a series of objects, stationary and moving, ranging from a tissue-paper ball, a crude tissue-paper mouse, through stuffed and dead mice, and finally live mice. Only one bird responded consistently to paper models, and only to moving mouse-models. All birds attacked live mice, including five that had not responded to models or dead mice. Two of the five inexperienced birds attacked their first live mouse in less than 10 sec. Attacks on paper models were desultory and disoriented and are believed to represent play rather than predatory behaviour. Attacks on live mice were intense, rapid, sustained and well-oriented, with the mouse being grasped by the thorax, neck or head and biting directed to the head or neck. Eight of nine birds attacked their first mouse (live, dead, or stuffed) expertly and all nine birds achieved consistent, expert perfonnance in less than six trials. The inference is drawn that experience plays a minor role in the development of recognition, capturing and killing of mice by kestrels.


1982 ◽  
Vol 60 (1) ◽  
pp. 71-79 ◽  
Author(s):  
David M. Bird ◽  
Paul C. Laguë

Of 78 nesting attempts by captive American Kestrels (Falco sparverius) between 1974 and 1977, 95% successfully renested after removal of the first clutch. Replacement clutches had fewer eggs, longer eggs, and eggs with thicker shells than first clutches. Clutch size, egg length, eggshell thickness, and fresh egg weight declined seasonally. Renesting intervals were shorter in older, experienced layers and clutch size increased by 0.20 eggs with each additional year of age.


2002 ◽  
Vol 80 (3) ◽  
pp. 516-523 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel R Ardia

Behavioural dominance can cause individuals to use less-preferred habitats, with potentially important life-history consequences. In the American kestrel, Falco sparverius, females exclude males from preferred open areas; I hypothesized that this sex-related habitat segregation leads to energetic consequences for males. I predicted that males would show decreased body condition over winter, while females would not, and that females would maintain larger net-energy surpluses than would males. Working in southeastern Pennsylvania, between 1991 and 1995, I conducted 150 behavioural observations and measured body condition of 235 wintering kestrels. Male kestrels maintained a lower body condition (residuals of a regression of mass vs. size) than did females and showed a decrease in mean body condition over winter, which females did not. I estimated that females had larger daily energy expenditures than did males (248 vs. 195 kJ per bird per day, ratio 1.27) but also had larger daily energy intakes (537 vs. 322 kJ/day, ratio 1.67). Females had larger net energy surpluses than did males (288 vs. 126 kJ/day, ratio 2.27), particularly when temperatures were <0°C. I conclude that differences in energetics are due in part to habitat differences and that males may suffer consequences by being forced to use less-preferred habitats.


1987 ◽  
Vol 65 (2) ◽  
pp. 234-246 ◽  
Author(s):  
David C. Duncan

Nesting of northern pintails was studied in southern Alberta where breeding densities are high. Adults nested earlier and laid larger clutches than did yearlings in the wild. Captive pintails nested earlier, laid larger clutches, and appeared to renest more readily than did wild birds. Food may limit each of these parameters in the wild. The reproductive output of female pintails nesting in high densities in southern Alberta appears to be lower than that of birds breeding at Delta, Manitoba, because of reduced clutch size and lower renesting rate. Clutch size was strongly correlated with laying date but the laying of larger clutches by adults in the wild (and by captive birds relative to wild birds) was not simply a consequence of earlier nesting. A number of proximate causes suggested to explain the seasonal decline in clutch size (hen age, renesting, declining food resources, and decreased body reserves) were rejected. Whatever the mechanism through which laying date influences clutch size, the ultimate reason for this phenomenon may be a seasonally declining survival rate of young which has selected for reduced reproductive effort later in the breeding season. Captive pintails fed a 14% or 29% protein diet after laying their first clutches did not differ in frequency of renesting, clutch size, or renest interval.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document