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-List Of Titles -Using an electronic monitoring system to link offspring provisioning and foraging behavior of a wild passerine

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/143473

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Title
Using an electronic monitoring system to link offspring provisioning and foraging behavior of a wild passerine
Related
The Auk, Vol. 128, No. 1, (2011), p.26-35
DOI
10.1525/auk.2011.10117
Publisher
University of California Press
Date
2011
Author/Creator
Mariette, Mylene M
Author/Creator
Pariser, Emma C
Author/Creator
Gilby, Amanda J
Author/Creator
Magrath, Michael J. L
Author/Creator
Pryke, Sarah R
Author/Creator
Griffith, Simon C
Description
Although the costs of parental care are at the foundations of optimal-parental-investment theory, our understanding of the nature of the underlying costs is limited by the difficulty of measuring variation in foraging effort. We simultaneously measured parental provisioning and foraging behavior in a free-living population of Zebra Finches (Taeniopygia guttata) using an electronic monitoring system. We fitted 145 adults with a passive transponder tag and remotely recorded their visits to nest boxes and feeders continuously over a 2-month period. After validating the accuracy of this monitoring system, we studied how provisioning and foraging activities varied through time (day and breeding cycle) and influenced the benefits (food received by the offspring) and costs (interclutch interval) of parental care. The provisioning rates of wild Zebra Finches were surprisingly low, with an average of only one visit per hour throughout the day. This was significantly lower than those reported for this model species in captivity and for most other passerines in the wild. Nest visitation rate only partially explained the amount of food received by the young, with parental foraging activity, including the minimum distance covered on foraging trips, being better predictors. Parents that sustained higher foraging activity and covered more distance during the first breeding attempt took longer to renest. These results demonstrate that in some species matching foraging activity with offspring provisioning may provide a better estimate of the true investment that individuals commit to a reproductive attempt.
Description
10 page(s)
Subject Keyword
Distance
Subject Keyword
Foraging cost
Subject Keyword
Nest visitation rate
Subject Keyword
Nestling provisioning
Subject Keyword
Parental care
Subject Keyword
PIT-tag
Subject Keyword
Taeniopygia guttata
Subject Keyword
Zebra Finch
Resource Type
journal article
Organisation
Macquarie University. Dept. of Biological Sciences

Identifier
http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/143473
Identifier
ISSN:0004-8038
Identifier
mq_res-ext-2-s2.0-79954539372
Language
eng
Reviewed
Reviewed
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Citation Format
E-mail Address
Subject
"The Auk"
 
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Gilby, Amanda J
Pryke, Sarah R

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