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      What makes a good parent? Sex-specific relationships between nest attendance, hormone levels, and breeding success in a long-lived seabird

      1 , 1
      The Auk
      American Ornithologists' Union

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          Why don't birds lay more eggs?

          Fifty years ago David Lack put forward a key hypothesis in life-history theory: that avian clutch is ultimately determined by the number of young that parents can provide with food. Since then, a plethora of brood manipulations has shown that birds can rear more young than the number of eggs they lay, and prompted a search for negative effects of increased effort on future reproduction. However, recent studies have shown that the demands of laying and incubating eggs generally omitted from experiments, could affect parental fitness. Lack's hypothesis, and the tests of its validity, need to be extended to encompass the full demands of producing and rearing the brood.
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            The relationship between fitness and baseline glucocorticoids in a passerine bird.

            Glucocorticoid (cort) hormones are increasingly applied in studies of free-ranging animals, with elevated baseline cort levels generally assumed to indicate individuals or populations in worse condition and with lower fitness (the Cort-Fitness Hypothesis). The relationship between cort and fitness is rarely validated and studies investigating the cort-fitness relationship often find results inconsistent with the Cort-Fitness Hypothesis. The inconsistency of these studies may result in part from variation in the cort-fitness relationship across life history stages. Here we address the following questions in a two-year study in free-ranging tree swallows (Tachycineta bicolor): (1) Do baseline cort levels correlate with fitness within a life history stage? (2) Does the cort-fitness relationship vary across different life history stages? (3) Does the cort-fitness relationship vary across life history stages within an individual? (4) Does reproductive effort influence cort levels, and do cort levels influence reproductive effort? We measured baseline cort and fitness components in female birds of known breeding stages. We find correlations between baseline cort levels and fitness within some life history stages, but the relationship shifts from negative during early breeding to positive during late breeding, even within the same individuals. A positive relationship between baseline cort and fitness components during the nestling period suggests that reproductive investment may elicit higher cort levels that feedback to reallocate more effort to reproduction during critical periods of nestling provisioning. Our findings provide reason to question the Cort-Fitness Hypothesis, and have implications for the application of cort measures in monitoring the condition of populations of conservation concern.
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              Interactions of Corticosterone with Feeding, Activity and Metabolism in Passerine Birds

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                The Auk
                The Auk
                American Ornithologists' Union
                0004-8038
                1938-4254
                July 2017
                July 2017
                : 134
                : 3
                : 644-658
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Institute for Avian Research “Vogelwarte Helgoland,” Wilhelmshaven, Germany
                Article
                10.1642/AUK-17-13.1
                613a5388-3329-42c5-95ca-a1d18292d89e
                © 2017

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