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Trade-offs in the early development of tree swallows (Tachycineta bicolor): offspring characteristics, offspring quality, and parental care
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Abstract |
Abstract
Life-history theory predicts that because organisms have limited resources available to them, they must make decisions to prudently allocate resources in a way that maximizes fitness. Therefore, there is expected to be a trade-off between current reproductive effort and future survival and reproduction, with those individuals investing in a current breeding attempt doing so at a cost to their own survival and/or future fecundity. Altricial birds rearing young are consequently expected to be prudent in their allocation of resources between brood-maintenance and self-maintenance, and their allocation choices may be influenced by numerous offspring characteristics that potentially indicate offspring "quality" or condition. My thesis had three main goals: 1) to understand if the smallest nestling tree swallows in a nest are of inherent poor "quality", or if they are the smallest simply due to being outcompeted by their older and larger siblings 2) to investigate whether, in an environment with parasites, it is the parents or their offspring who bear the costs associated with parasitism and 3) to better understand the function of gape and flange colouration in nestling tree swallows. Overall, I wanted to understand how each of these nestling characteristics affect, and are affected by, parental life-history trade-offs. By pairing observational data with a cross-fostering experiment, I determined that both total egg mass and yolk mass increased with order of laying. Nestlings that hatched earlier in the hatching sequence and were manipulated to be smaller within the size hierarchies in nests performed in a similar fashion as if they had retained their size advantage, but had lower immune responses, which may be because these earlier-hatched nestlings hatched from earlier-laid eggs with smaller yolks. By manipulating parasite levels in nests and then comparing nestling immune function and growth, and parental provisioning rates with control nests in a three-year study, I observed no significa |
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Persons |
Persons
Author (aut): Unger, Sophia A.
Thesis advisor (ths): Dawson, Russell
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DOI
https://doi.org/10.24124/2016/bpgub1154
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Degree granting institution (dgg): University of Northern British Columbia
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Library of Congress Classification
QL696.P247 U54 2016
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Number of pages in document: 127
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Copyright retained by the author.
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English
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Trade-offs in the early development of tree swallows (Tachycineta bicolor): offspring characteristics, offspring quality, and parental care
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