Nest Change and Individual Fitness in a Scopoli’s Shearwater Population: A Capture-Recapture Multistate Analysis

Author:

Sacchi Massimo1ORCID,Zenatello Marco1,Pezzo Francesco1ORCID,Cozzo Mario1,Pollonara Enrica23,Gotti Camilla1,De Faveri Adriano1,Baccetti Nicola1

Affiliation:

1. Italian Institute for Environmental Protection and Research (ISPRA), Via Ca’ Fornacetta, 9, 40064 Ozzano dell’Emilia, BO, Italy

2. Department of Biology, University of Pisa, Via Luca Ghini, 13, 56126 Pisa, PI, Italy

3. Tuscan Ornithological Center (COT) “Paolo Savi”, Via De Larderel, 93, 57125 Livorno, LI, Italy

Abstract

Seabirds are compelled to nest on land, away from their feeding areas, which they can only reach by leaving eggs or chicks in the nest, often for long periods of time. For this reason, almost all of them have evolved social monogamy as a reproductive system, cooperation between partners for incubation and chick rearing, and long-lasting pair bonds. Additionally, nesting conditions are essential for successful reproduction, and the nest can be considered a resource if it provides more guarantees in this aspect. As a result, the nest may be a source of contention and intraspecific competition, especially among males. In this work, we analyze long-term data of the Scopoli’s shearwater (Calonectris diomedea) population to address the fitness consequences of nest change regarding survival and reproductive success. We used capture–recapture multistate models and the AICc model selection approach to test three hypotheses: breeding failure triggers nest change; nest change affects breeding success probability; nest change affects survival. Each year, about 5% of the breeders move to a new nest. For males, it was mainly a way to improve their breeding conditions and was observed in their early years as a breeder. Conversely, for females, it was a way to improve their reproductive performance by trying with a new mate after a failure. Males that changed nests improved their breeding success probability. Instead, in females, there was no causal relation between nest change and breeding success, the latter having been more influenced by the intrinsic quality of the female as a breeder. We did not even find a link between nest change and survival. Instead, we demonstrated that reproductive failure could affect the apparent survival of females, probably because it induces breeding dispersal.

Funder

EC

Italian Ministry of the Environment and Energy Security

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous),Ecological Modeling,Ecology

Reference84 articles.

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