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A novel strategy to escape a poor habitat: red-necked grebes transfer flightless young to other ponds. | LitMetric

A novel strategy to escape a poor habitat: red-necked grebes transfer flightless young to other ponds.

Acta Ethol

Department of Nature Conservation, Institute of Biology, Maria Curie-Skłodowska University, Akademicka 19, 20-033 Lublin, Poland.

Published: February 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • Animals facing the threat of losing their young may engage in risky behaviors, as shown in red-necked grebes which attempt to move their flightless chicks to better feeding grounds.
  • In a study, these grebes transported their chicks (2-4 weeks old) from food-scarce ponds, but this only happened in 3.3% of breeding attempts due to challenges like distance and predation risks.
  • The exact method of transferring the chicks is uncertain; they could have either followed parents walking along levees or been carried on parents' backs while flying.

Article Abstract

Animals confronted with the threat of the death of their offspring may exhibit unusual and risk-prone behaviours. Grebes (Podicipediformes) are water birds which cannot effectively walk, thus unfledged young are assumed to be unable to depart from their natal ponds by land. We provide evidence that red-necked grebes , breeding on ponds with scarce food resources, transferred their flightless young (2-4 weeks old) to other, unconnected ponds by land or air. Although a large proportion of breeding grebes in the study area nested on food-poor fish ponds acting as ecological traps, where they suffered significant brood losses, brood movements to new ponds accounted for only 3.3% of such breeding attempts. The infrequency of this strategy may be explained by the lack of suitable territories in close proximity and the high risk of predation or fatal injury. The means of chick transfer remains unclear; the chicks may have followed or been carried by parents shuffling across the pond levees; alternatively, parents may have carried the young on their backs in flight. Our findings indicate that red-necked grebes assess the current level of resources available for chicks and may adopt novel and risky strategies to escape total brood failure.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5427135PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10211-017-0254-7DOI Listing

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