Ap. Curlee et Sr. Beissinger, EXPERIMENTAL-ANALYSIS OF MASS CHANGE IN FEMALE GREEN-RUMPED PARROTLETS (FORUPS-PASSERINUS) - THE ROLE OF MALE COOPERATION, Behavioral ecology, 6(2), 1995, pp. 192-198
Mass change was determined by weighing nine unmanipulated pairs of gre
en-rumped parrotlets during prospecting, egg laying, hatching, and fle
dging. Male and female mass were similar at the onset of prospecting.
However, female mass had increased 25% by the start of egg laying, and
females maintained the heavy mass through incubation. Females began l
osing mass at the time of hatching and reverted to weights that were s
imilar to those of males by the end of hatching. Males neither gained
nor lost mass during breeding. To test predictions from mass change hy
potheses, 25 females were assigned manipulated broods of four or eight
young. Females were weighed on the first day of hatching and 6, 10, a
nd 27 days later, or until first fledging. Females with four and eight
young lost the same amount of mass. Females lost less mass during bro
oding if their spent less time away from the nest, whereas females wit
h eight young tended to lose less mass if they spent more time away fr
om the nest. Mass change after brooding was not related to provisionin
g rates of nestlings by females or males of either experimental group.
Our results contradict the hypothesis that mass loss is due to stress
, and correspond to some of the predictions of the adaptive, gonadal,
and brooding starvation hypotheses.