Allison J. Byrd, Colleen S. Mullins, Daniel J. Becker, Adam M. Fudickar
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Whether the amount of time a bird is fed during development drives this variation in growth rate and morphology is unknown. By removing supplemental environmental stressors (e.g. weather, predation) and standardizing feeding rate and environment, we explored the influence of daily duration of nestling provisioning on dark-eyed junco <i>Junco hyemalis</i> nestlings. We hand-reared 65 chicks of a sedentary junco subspecies <i>J. h. carolinensis</i> under both their natural photoperiod and the longer photoperiod of a closely related migratory subspecies <i>J. h. hyemalis</i> and compared growth rate, mass, morphology and the amount of food consumed. Average growth rate, fasted mass, wing length and total daily food consumption were all greater in birds hand-reared under the longer, more northern photoperiod treatment. These findings suggest that increased daily photoperiod at higher latitudes may allow for greater total food provisioning and thus may play a role in the ability of parents in compressed breeding seasons to produce high quality offspring. This points to a trade-off between provisioning effort and nestling growth rate in lower latitude (shorter photoperiod) populations and points to an important role of developmental plasticity on growth rate and morphology.</p>","PeriodicalId":15278,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Avian Biology","volume":"2023 11-12","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":1.5000,"publicationDate":"2023-08-16","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/jav.03113","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Nestling growth rate and food consumption increases under experimentally prolonged daylength in a New World sparrow\",\"authors\":\"Allison J. Byrd, Colleen S. 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Whether the amount of time a bird is fed during development drives this variation in growth rate and morphology is unknown. By removing supplemental environmental stressors (e.g. weather, predation) and standardizing feeding rate and environment, we explored the influence of daily duration of nestling provisioning on dark-eyed junco <i>Junco hyemalis</i> nestlings. We hand-reared 65 chicks of a sedentary junco subspecies <i>J. h. carolinensis</i> under both their natural photoperiod and the longer photoperiod of a closely related migratory subspecies <i>J. h. hyemalis</i> and compared growth rate, mass, morphology and the amount of food consumed. Average growth rate, fasted mass, wing length and total daily food consumption were all greater in birds hand-reared under the longer, more northern photoperiod treatment. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
在评估鸟类繁殖时,生活史理论考察了亲代努力、后代数量和大小以及雏鸟发育速度之间的权衡。发育中的鸟类的生长速度和体型在地理上存在差异,并可能因纬度和迁徙策略而异。在后代大小方面,由于天气事件、捕食压力、食物可得性、配偶数量和父母供给的相关影响,相同或相似物种的雏鸟的生长速度可能会偏离。此外,在高纬度地区筑巢的物种,较长的光照周期增加了雏鸟每天可以喂养的时间,并且增加的雏鸟供给与生长速度呈正相关。鸟类在发育过程中被喂食的时间是否会导致生长速度和形态的变化尚不清楚。通过去除附加环境应激因素(如天气、捕食),标准化摄食率和环境,探讨了日摄食时间对黑眼棉绒绒仔鸡雏鸟的影响。我们人工饲养了65只定居junco亚种J. h. carolinensis的雏鸟,在其自然光周期和密切相关的迁徙亚种J. h. hyemalis的较长光周期下,并比较了它们的生长速度、质量、形态和摄食量。在较长、较北的光周期处理下,人工饲养的鸟类的平均生长率、摄食质量、翅长和总日食量都较大。这些发现表明,在高纬度地区,增加的每日光周期可能允许更多的总食物供应,因此可能在父母在压缩的繁殖季节中产生高质量后代的能力中发挥作用。这表明在低纬度(较短的光周期)种群中,哺育努力和雏鸟生长速率之间存在权衡,并指出发育可塑性对生长速率和形态的重要作用。
Nestling growth rate and food consumption increases under experimentally prolonged daylength in a New World sparrow
When evaluating avian reproduction, life history theory examines the trade-offs between parental effort, the number and size of offspring, and the rate of nestling development. The growth rates and body sizes of developing birds vary geographically and can diverge with both latitude and migratory strategy. In terms of offspring size, growth rate can deviate in nestlings of the same or similar species due to the correlated influences of weather events, predation pressure, food availability, number of nestmates and parental provisioning. Furthermore, a longer photoperiod for species nesting at higher latitudes increases the duration over which a nestling can be fed each day, and increased nestling provisioning has been positively correlated with growth rate. Whether the amount of time a bird is fed during development drives this variation in growth rate and morphology is unknown. By removing supplemental environmental stressors (e.g. weather, predation) and standardizing feeding rate and environment, we explored the influence of daily duration of nestling provisioning on dark-eyed junco Junco hyemalis nestlings. We hand-reared 65 chicks of a sedentary junco subspecies J. h. carolinensis under both their natural photoperiod and the longer photoperiod of a closely related migratory subspecies J. h. hyemalis and compared growth rate, mass, morphology and the amount of food consumed. Average growth rate, fasted mass, wing length and total daily food consumption were all greater in birds hand-reared under the longer, more northern photoperiod treatment. These findings suggest that increased daily photoperiod at higher latitudes may allow for greater total food provisioning and thus may play a role in the ability of parents in compressed breeding seasons to produce high quality offspring. This points to a trade-off between provisioning effort and nestling growth rate in lower latitude (shorter photoperiod) populations and points to an important role of developmental plasticity on growth rate and morphology.
期刊介绍:
Journal of Avian Biology publishes empirical and theoretical research in all areas of ornithology, with an emphasis on behavioural ecology, evolution and conservation.