Seasonal variation in food availability influences the breeding strategy of White-collared Blackbirds Turdus albocinctus on the Tibetan Plateau

Autor: Guo-Liang Chen, Juan-Juan Luo, Li-Qing Fan, Yu-Yan Xie, Bo Du, Xin-Wei Da, Qing-Miao Ren, Li-Li Xian
Rok vydání: 2017
Předmět:
Zdroj: Ibis. 159:873-882
ISSN: 0019-1019
DOI: 10.1111/ibi.12506
Popis: Parent birds show a continuous spectrum of breeding strategies, ranging from a low-fecundity and high-survival pattern to a high-fecundity, low-survival pattern. Investigations of parental breeding strategies under variable environmental conditions can illustrate how parents trade-off the benefits and costs of these two extreme strategies. White-collared Blackbirds Turdus albocinctus can breed twice a year on the Tibetan Plateau. We show that both life-history traits and parental feeding behaviour differ between these two breeding attempts. In the first attempt, the birds produced small clutches and fledged a small number of nestlings of high body condition. In the second attempt, they produced larger clutches and fledged more nestlings of lower body condition. Males made greater contributions to brood provisioning compared with females in the first attempt but there was no sex difference in brood provisioning in the second attempt. In the first attempt, producing smaller clutches can shorten the nestling period, and the increased male contribution to brood provisioning can protect the energy reserves of females. Thus, females can begin a second attempt sooner and produce larger clutches. During the second nesting attempt, when conditions are warmer and wetter, parents rely on a broader array of food types (both invertebrates and plant material, primarily berries) than during the first attempt, which includes only animal food such as arthropods and annelids. We suggest that this difference in breeding strategies between nesting attempts and sexes is in part influenced by marked seasonal variation in food availability.
Databáze: OpenAIRE