INCREASE OF PARENTAL EFFORT IN EXPERIMENTALLY ENLARGED BROODS OF PALLID-SWIFTS

Citation
M. Cucco et G. Malacarne, INCREASE OF PARENTAL EFFORT IN EXPERIMENTALLY ENLARGED BROODS OF PALLID-SWIFTS, Canadian journal of zoology, 73(8), 1995, pp. 1387-1395
Citations number
50
Categorie Soggetti
Zoology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00084301
Volume
73
Issue
8
Year of publication
1995
Pages
1387 - 1395
Database
ISI
SICI code
0008-4301(1995)73:8<1387:IOPEIE>2.0.ZU;2-Y
Abstract
Variation in parental effort of Pallid Swifts (Apus pallidus) was inve stigated for 3 years in a colony in northwestern Italy. The masses of adults and of bolus loads brought to chicks were monitored by electron ic balances inserted under nests, and feeding rates were monitored by video cameras. Fluctuations in daily food availability were measured w ith an insect-suction trap. Manipulation experiments on broods origina lly consisting of three chicks were performed to increase (four chicks ) or reduce (two chicks) adult effort, with the aim of determining if parents tend to allocate food primarily to themselves or to their offs pring, and if mass loss in adults results from reproductive stress or from adaptive programmed anorexia. With the enlargement of brood size, mean bolus mass remained constant, but the visitation rate increased significantly. Daily food abundance did not influence the amount of fo od allocated to chicks (neither time spent foraging nor the bolus mass changed), but positively influenced the mass of adults, which showed large daily variations. These results indicate that parents tend to in vest constantly in offspring, at their own expense when food is scarce . Our data lend support to the cost of reproduction hypothesis instead of adaptive anorexia, since adults lose mass mainly in the brooding p eriod, when demand is highest, and always regain mass when prey availa bility is greater.