Authors
Kyle H Elliott, Jannie F Linnebjerg, Chantelle Burke, Anthony J Gaston, Anders Mosbech, Morten Frederiksen, Flemming Merkel
Publication date
2017/5/1
Journal
The American Naturalist
Volume
189
Issue
5
Pages
526-538
Publisher
University of Chicago Press
Description
The duration of parental care in animals varies widely, from none to lifelong. Such variation is typically thought to represent a trade-off between growth and safety. Seabirds show wide variation in the age at which offspring leave the nest, making them ideal to test the idea that a trade-off between high energy gain at sea and high safety at the nest drives variation in departure age (Ydenberg’s model). To directly test the model assumptions, we attached time-depth recorders to murre parents (fathers [which do all parental care at sea] and mothers; of each). Except for the initial mortality experienced by chicks departing from the colony, the mortality rate at sea was similar to the mortality rate at the colony. However, energy gained by the chick per day was ∼2.1 times as high at sea compared with at the colony because the father spent more time foraging, since he no longer needed to spend time commuting to and …
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