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  • Dominance-dispersion  (1)
  • Rearing conditions  (1)
  • Zebra finch  (1)
  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Behavioral ecology and sociobiology 36 (1995), S. 323-332 
    ISSN: 1432-0762
    Keywords: Key wordsCathartes aura ; Migrant/resident ; Dominance-dispersion ; Foraging group size ; Competition
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract We placed carcasses in three different vegetation types in the heterogeneous savannas of central Venezuela to investigate the role of social dominance in habitat use by flocking migrant and resident turkey vultures (Cathartes aura meridionalis and C. a. ruficollis). Migrants foraged primarily in savanna habitats while residents foraged almost exclusively in gallery forest. In the gallery forest residents discovered carrion first significantly more often than migrants, despite there being equal densities of residents and migrants foraging over this habitat. Because residents fed in smaller groups than migrants at carcasses they had higher feeding rates. There was also a negative relationship between group sizes of residents and migrants. The feeding rate of residents declined in response to increased group size of migrants, but group size of residents had no effect. Migrant group size also had a greater effect on resident feeding rates than king vulture presence or absence. When the effect of migrant and resident group size on feeding rates in migrants was compared, the most significant factor was migrant group size. A second analysis showed that both resident group size and presence or absence of king vultures had a significant effect on feeding rates in migrants. Rates of agonistic encounters in migrant and resident turkey vultures increased weakly in relation to group size. However, there was an increase in residents’ encounter rate with migrants in relation to increased migrant group size; there was no difference in resident encounter rates with other residents in relation to resident group size. Migrants dominated residents in almost all agonistic interactions over carcasses. We suggest that savanna habitats were less attractive to residents for foraging because they held larger groups of migrants.
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-0762
    Keywords: Keywords Sex allocation ; Differential mortality ; Rearing conditions ; Brood sex composition ; Lesser black-backed gull ; Larus fuscus
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract  Empirical evidence is growing that the offspring sex ratio in birds can be biased in relation to the body condition of parents during breeding. The sex ratio bias may come about because (1) the actual production of the two sexes may be skewed and/or (2) there may be a sex bias in early nestling mortality contingent on parental condition. By manipulating parental condition and giving them a control brood to rear, thereby eliminating effects operating via the eggs, we examined the extent to which parental condition influences the post-hatching survival of male and female lesser black-backed gulls, Larus fuscus. We found that the pre-fledging survival of male chicks was strongly reduced in all-male broods reared by parents in poor condition. Pre-fledging survival of female chicks was, however, unaffected by parental condition or brood sex composition. Thus, independently of any production biases, sex differences in nestling mortality alone can bias the offspring sex ratio at fledging in relation to the prevailing rearing conditions. In other studies on gulls we have, however, also shown that females in poor condition at laying preferentially produce female eggs. Clearly a bias in fledging sex ratio can occur within the same species due to a combination of differential production and differential post-laying mortality; the latter can involve a differential effect of poor egg quality on male and female offspring, differential effects of brood sex composition on their survival and a difference in the capacity of parents to rear males and females. All of these processes need to be taken into account in attempting to understand offspring sex ratios.
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Journal of comparative physiology 165 (1995), S. 161-164 
    ISSN: 1432-136X
    Keywords: Muscle proteins ; Egg proteins ; 35S-methionine ; Zebra finch
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Many bird species show a loss of female muscle mass at the time of egg formation. In this study we investigated whether there was a causal link between the loss in muscle condition and the formation of egg proteins by feeding 35S-methionine to female zebra finches to label muscle proteins. When these birds subsequently bred the isotope was transferred to the egg proteins: isotope loss from female muscle tissue was significantly greater in birds which had bred than in control groups which had not.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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