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Parent birds assess nest predation risk and adjust their reproductive strategies

January 1, 2006

Avian life history theory has long assumed that nest predation plays a minor role in shaping reproductive strategies. Yet, this assumption remains conspicuously untested by broad experiments that alter environmental risk of nest predation, despite the fact that nest predation is a major source of reproductive failure. Here, we examined whether parents can assess experimentally reduced nest predation risk and alter their reproductive strategies. We experimentally reduced nest predation risk and show that in safer environments parents increased investment in young through increased egg size, clutch mass, and the rate they fed nestlings. Parents also increased investment in female condition by increasing the rates that males fed incubating females at the nest, and decreasing the time that females spent incubating. These results demonstrate that birds can assess nest predation risk at large and that nest predation plays a key role in the expression of avian reproductive strategies. ?? 2006 Blackwell Publishing Ltd/CNRS.

Publication Year 2006
Title Parent birds assess nest predation risk and adjust their reproductive strategies
DOI 10.1111/j.1461-0248.2006.00892.x
Authors J.J. Fontaine, T. E. Martin
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Ecology Letters
Index ID 70030321
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse