Mjje. Loonen et al., The benefit of large broods in barnacle geese: a study using natural and experimental manipulations, J ANIM ECOL, 68(4), 1999, pp. 753-768
1. In precocial birds, where the young feed themselves, the costs and benef
its of brood size are still poorly understood. An experimental manipulation
of brood size was employed to examine the effects of brood size on both pa
rents and young in a wild population of barnacle geese [Branta leucopsis (B
echstein)] during brood-rearing on Svalbard.
2. Social dominance of the family unit, the amount of vigilance behaviour o
f the parents, the growth of the goslings in the family unit and an index o
f body condition for female parents during moult were all positively correl
ated with brood size.
3. When brood size changed as a result of natural events (i.e. predation or
adoption) or experimental manipulation, rates of dominance, parental vigil
ance, gosling growth and female parent condition changed in a similar direc
tion to the observed relation between the variable and brood size in unchan
ged broods.
4. After fledging, the fast-growing goslings in large broods survived bette
r during autumn migration, while there was no apparent net cost in survival
or next-year breeding for the parents.
5. Via a direct effect of brood size on dominance of the family unit, large
broods were beneficial for both parent and young in a situation where ther
e was strong intraspecific competition for the available food resources.
6. This study provides a clear demonstration of a causal relationship betwe
en brood size and various components of both gosling and adult fitness and
is of direct relevance to the phenomenon of adoption and the evolution of b
rood size in this species.