AI Article Synopsis

Article Abstract

We determined whether a marine diving bird, the rhinoceros auklet, Cerorhinca monocerata, used different foraging behaviour and collected different prey items for its young than when feeding itself. Foraging behaviour was determined by conducting visual scans, and prey items were sampled by collecting fish delivered to chicks and by collecting fish where auklets were self-feeding, which was verified by two other sources of information. Adult auklets ate small fish (59.1+/-0.5 mm, N=547), including juvenile Pacific sand lance, Ammodytes hexapterus, and Pacific herring, Clupea harengus, but collected larger fish to feed their chicks (95.2+/-1.3 mm, N=321), including primarily Pacific sand lance, Pacific herring, Pacific salmon species, Oncorhynchus spp., and surf smelt, Hypomesus pretiosus. In addition, auklets collected fish for themselves primarily by diving in mixed-species feeding flocks before 1600 hours, whereas they collected fish to feed their chicks by diving solitarily after 1600 hours. This suggests that auklets switched both foraging behaviour and prey selection when collecting fish for self-feeding, compared with when collecting fish for chick provisioning. Several avian studies have documented different diets of adults and chicks, but this is the first research to observe directly and document different foraging behaviour used in adult and chick provisioning. We emphasize the importance of distinguishing between self-feeding and chick provisioning in foraging and life history studies. Copyright 1999 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1006/anbe.1999.1209DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

chick provisioning
16
foraging behaviour
16
collecting fish
16
prey selection
8
self-feeding chick
8
prey items
8
fish
8
pacific sand
8
sand lance
8
pacific herring
8

Similar Publications

Abstract: Cooperative behaviour is widespread in animals and is likely to be the result of multiple selective pressures. A contentious hypothesis is that helping enhances the probability of obtaining a sexual partner (i.e.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Sex-Specific Variation in Foraging Behavior is Related to Telomere Length in a Long-Lived Seabird.

Ecol Evol

December 2024

Departamento de Ecología Evolutiva, Instituto de Ecología Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México Ciudad de México Mexico.

Foraging during breeding is a demanding activity linked to breeding investment and possibly constrained by individual quality. Telomere length, the protective nucleoproteins located at the ends of the chromosomes, is considered a trait reflecting somatic maintenance and individual quality. Therefore, foraging effort and parental investment may be positively related to telomere length, if individuals with longer telomeres are of better quality and thus able to maintain better body condition and allocate more resources to parental activities.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Gene ontology defines pre-post- hatch energy dynamics in the complexus muscle of broiler chickens.

BMC Genomics

December 2024

Department of Animal Science, The Robert H. Smith Faculty of Agriculture, Food, and Environment, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, 7610001, Rehovot, Israel.

Background: Chicken embryos emerge from their shell by the piercing movement of the hatching muscle. Although considered a key player during hatching, with activity that imposes a substantial metabolic demand, data are still limited. The study provides a bioenergetic and transcriptomic analyses during the pre-post-hatching period.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Noninvasive Methods Unveil the Trophic Transmission of the Tapeworm in Gull-Billed Terns.

Ecol Evol

November 2024

Departamento de Anatomía, Biología Celular y Zoología, Facultad de Ciencias Universidad de Extremadura Badajoz Spain.

Recent developments in microscopic and molecular tools have allowed the implementation of new approaches for assessing parasitic infections in wildlife populations. This is particularly important for the noninvasive detection and quantification of endoparasites in live animals. Here, we combined copromicroscopic (Mini-FLOTAC) and molecular (qPCR) techniques to detect the infection of the macroparasite (Cestoda, Pseudophyllidea) in fresh droppings of Gull-billed Terns (Charadriiformes, Laridae) breeding in southwestern Spain.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Nest secondary plants and their associations with haemosporidian blood parasites in blue tit females.

Parasitology

November 2024

Department of Evolutionary Ecology, National Museum of Natural Sciences - Spanish National Research Council (CSIC). c/ José Gutiérrez Abascal 2, 28006 Madrid, Spain.

Avian nests often contain aromatic plant fragments, which has led to propose among others that they repel ectoparasites or vectors of blood parasites (‘nest protection hypothesis’). To date, the relationship between secondary plant provisioning and the parent's blood parasites remains unexplored. We investigated whether the presence of secondary plants in nests during different reproductive stages (before incubation, during incubation and nestling period) was associated with the presence of nest-dwelling ectoparasites and females’ blood-parasite infections in blue tits () during chick rearing.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!