Brood division in a marsh-dwelling bird and its relation with the increase in offspring survival, acceleration of renest, and reduced competition for food resources
Author:
Sandretti-Silva Giovanna,Teixeira L.,Golec C.,Belmonte-Lopes R.,Sobotka D. D.,Reinert B. L.,Pizo M. A.,Bornschein M. R.
Abstract
Parental care involves strategies that increase the offspring’s survival. In some birds, each adult only feeds one young (brood division). Six hypotheses explain the functions of brood division: 1) reduced predation; 2) selection of a young by the parents; 3) selection of an adult by the young; 4) reduction of offspring competition; 5) efficiency improvement in parent-offspring interactions; and 6) social specialization. We studied the reproductive behavior and nestling morphology of the species to evaluate the possible functions associated with the brood division inFormicivora acutirostris, a bird of tidal marshes of southern Brazil. Females lay two eggs, but nests with one nestling may occur. We monitored 899 nests, nestlings, and parental care of young until they reached independence. Brood division occurred when the fledglings left the nest and continued until their independence. We did not observe a difference in the frequency with which sex feed single fledglings’ clutches. The fledglings remain in separated areas (prohypothesis #1). There is a sex bias in the division (prohypothesis #2). Adults fed the siblings equally (contrahypothesis #3). There is no aggression between siblings (contrahypothesis #4). Each fledgling remained close to their adult and responds only to it (prohypotheses #5 and #6). We propose that brood division in the species may 7) reduce drowning of fledglings, 8) spatially divide food consumption, and 9) allow concomitant reproduction. We emphasize flooding as a structuring force forF. acutirostris, which raises concerns about the effects of climate change on this species.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Reference37 articles.
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