Survival is a key component of fitness. Species that occupy discrete breeding colonies with different characteristics are often exposed to varying costs and benefits associated with group size or environmental conditions, and survival is an integrative net measure of these effects. We investigated the extent to which survival probability of adult (≥ 1-year old) cliff swallows (Petrochelidon pyrrhonota) occupying different colonies resembled that of their parental cohort and thus whether the natal colony had long-term effects on individuals. Individuals were cross-fostered between colonies soon after hatching and their presence as breeders monitored at colonies in the western Nebraska study area for the subsequent decade. Colony-specific adu...
A challenge of life-history theory is to explain why animal body size does not continue to increase,...
Most colonially breeding animals occupy colonies that range in size from a few pairs to thousands of...
Mark–recapture and behavioral ecology: a case study of Cliff Swallows.— Mark–recapture and the stati...
Survival is a key component of fitness. Species that occupy discrete breeding colonies with differen...
The variation in breeding colony size seen in populations of most colonial birds may reflect heritab...
Early life ecological conditions have well-documented short-term effects on offspring phenotype and ...
Little is known in general about how group size or ectoparasitism affect survival in colonial animal...
One probable cost of dispersing to a new breeding habitat is unfamiliarity with local conditions suc...
1.\u2002Longevity is a major determinant of individual differences in Darwinian fitness. Several stu...
Extra-pair paternity (EPP) – the siring of offspring by a male other than a female’s social partner ...
Animal groups often represent nonrandom subsets of individuals, and increasing evidence indicates th...
1. Understanding the degree to which reproductive success varies with an individual’s age and lifesp...
Variation in group size is characteristic of most social species. The extent to which individuals so...
This thesis presents the results of a study on the Swallow Hirundo rustica carried out in Central S...
Most colonially breeding animals occupy colonies that range in size from a few pairs to thousands of...
A challenge of life-history theory is to explain why animal body size does not continue to increase,...
Most colonially breeding animals occupy colonies that range in size from a few pairs to thousands of...
Mark–recapture and behavioral ecology: a case study of Cliff Swallows.— Mark–recapture and the stati...
Survival is a key component of fitness. Species that occupy discrete breeding colonies with differen...
The variation in breeding colony size seen in populations of most colonial birds may reflect heritab...
Early life ecological conditions have well-documented short-term effects on offspring phenotype and ...
Little is known in general about how group size or ectoparasitism affect survival in colonial animal...
One probable cost of dispersing to a new breeding habitat is unfamiliarity with local conditions suc...
1.\u2002Longevity is a major determinant of individual differences in Darwinian fitness. Several stu...
Extra-pair paternity (EPP) – the siring of offspring by a male other than a female’s social partner ...
Animal groups often represent nonrandom subsets of individuals, and increasing evidence indicates th...
1. Understanding the degree to which reproductive success varies with an individual’s age and lifesp...
Variation in group size is characteristic of most social species. The extent to which individuals so...
This thesis presents the results of a study on the Swallow Hirundo rustica carried out in Central S...
Most colonially breeding animals occupy colonies that range in size from a few pairs to thousands of...
A challenge of life-history theory is to explain why animal body size does not continue to increase,...
Most colonially breeding animals occupy colonies that range in size from a few pairs to thousands of...
Mark–recapture and behavioral ecology: a case study of Cliff Swallows.— Mark–recapture and the stati...