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Title: | Breeding Performance in Relation to Nest-Site Substratum in a Buff-Necked Ibis (Theristicus Caudatus) Population in Patagonia |
Authors: | Donázar, José A. CSIC ORCID; Ceballos, Olga CSIC ORCID; Travaini, Alejandro CSIC ORCID; Rodríguez, Alejandro CSIC ORCID ; Funes, Martín; Hiraldo, Fernando CSIC ORCID | Keywords: | Nest-site polymorphism habitat saturation Daily mortality Reproductive success Buff-necked Ibis Theristicus caudatus Argentina |
Issue Date: | Dec-1994 | Publisher: | University of California Press | Citation: | The Condor 96:994—1002 (1994) | Abstract: | In northern Argentinean Patagonia, Buff-necked Ibis (Theristicus caudatus) nest on different substrata: cliffs, trees, and marsh vegetation. According to the ideal-free distribution hypothesis, this polymorphism may be due to the occupation of the best breeding habitats by dominant individuals and the relegation of the subdominant birds to marginal substrata with a lower probability of achieving successful breeding. We investigated whether there were any variations in the breeding performance among colonies and whether these variations were related to the breeding substratum. Laying date varied from the third week of September to the last week of October, laying occurring earlier in colonies at lower elevations. Clutch size per colony varied between 1.8 and 2.0 (X 1.9, n = 106), but significant differences were not detected among colonies. Brood size per colony varied significantly, ranging between 1.3 and 2.0 (x = 1.8, n = 164). The substratum of breeding did not influence variations in any of these three parameters. The physical condition of the chicks did not vary among substrata, but there was inter-colony variation in broods of two chicks. Daily rates of nest losses were similar among colonies reaching 6.2% (n 856) during incubation and 1.4% (n = 966) during the nestling period. Brood reduction was low; the daily mortality rate of chicks (0.7%, n 934) did not vary among colonies. The most common known cause of nest and chick losses was predation. These results indicate that breeding success varied only slightly from one colony to the other and that these variations are independent of the nesting substratum. In consequence, birds would not prefer one substratum over another. | Publisher version (URL): | http://www.jstor.org/stable/1369108 | URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10261/39779 |
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