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Time constraints in temperate-breeding species: Influence of growing season length on reproductive strategies
January 1, 2011
Organisms that reproduce in temperate regions have limited time to produce offspring successfully, and this constraint is expected to be more pronounced in areas with short growing seasons. Information concerning how reproductive ecology of endotherms might be influenced by growing season length (GSL) is rare, and species that breed over a broad geographic range provide an opportunity to study the effects of time constraints on reproductive strategies. We analyzed data from a temperate‐breeding bird, the lesser scaup Aythya affinis; hereafter scaup, collected at eight sites across a broad gradient of GSL to evaluate three hypotheses related to reproductive compensation in response to varying time constraints. Clutch initiation date in scaup was unaffected by GSL and was unrelated to latitude; spring thaw dates had a marginal impact on timing of breeding. Clutch size declined during the nesting season, as is reported frequently in bird species, but was also unaffected by GSL. Scaup do not appear to compensate for shorter growing seasons by more rapidly reducing clutch size. This study demonstrates that this species is remarkably consistent in terms of timing of breeding and clutch size, regardless of growing season characteristics. Such inflexibility could make this species particularly sensitive to environmental changes that affect resource availabilities.
Citation Information
Publication Year
2011
Title
Time constraints in temperate-breeding species: Influence of growing season length on reproductive strategies
K. E. B. Gurney, Russell G. Clark, Stuart Slattery, N. V. Smith-Downey, Jordan I. Walker, L. M. Armstrong, S. E. Stephens, Michael J. Petrula, R. M. Corcoran, K. Martin, K. A. Degroot, Rodney W. Brook, Alan D. Afton, K. Cutting, J. M. Warren, M. Fournier, David N. Koons