NESTLING GROWTH-PATTERNS AND ANTIPREDATOR RESPONSES - A COMPARISON BETWEEN 4 ACROCEPHALUS WARBLERS

Citation
S. Kleindorfer et al., NESTLING GROWTH-PATTERNS AND ANTIPREDATOR RESPONSES - A COMPARISON BETWEEN 4 ACROCEPHALUS WARBLERS, BIOLOGIA, 52(5), 1997, pp. 677-685
Citations number
44
Journal title
BIOLOGIA
ISSN journal
00063088 → ACNP
Volume
52
Issue
5
Year of publication
1997
Pages
677 - 685
Database
ISI
SICI code
0006-3088(1997)52:5<677:NGAAR->2.0.ZU;2-G
Abstract
Nestling growth rate was investigated in four Acrocephalus warblers to determine the relative importance of predation and food abundance for chick development. To permit interspecific comparisons, the growth ra te constant It was calculated for body mass using logistic conversion factors. Insect abundance at the nest site and predation rates were co mpared for each species. The results suggest that breeding time window correlates with food abundance and mating system, while both relative predation levels and food abundance influence the nestling phase dura tion and chick growth rate. Furthermore, chick development measured as the time in days to attain 50% of adult weight (the growth inflection point) correlated with the onset of the chick antipredator response t o jump from the nest to a controlled observer approach. We present a c onceptual framework to compare the day of inflection in growth rate as the starting point for the onset of antipredator behaviour (such as c rouching) by nestlings. We suggest that growth patterns within the nes tling phase, and not necessarily the nestling phase duration, may prov ide clues to antipredator strategies when correcting for physiological constraints to development, such as in comparisons among closely rela ted species.