The duration of parental care in animals varies widely, from none to lifelong. Such variation is typically thought to represent a trade-off between growth and safety. Seabirds show wide variation in the age at which offspring leave the nest, making them ideal to test the idea that a trade-off between high energy gain at sea and high safety at the nest drives variation in departure age (Ydenberg’s model). To directly test the model assumptions, we attached time-depth recorders to murre parents (fathers [which do all parental care at sea] and mothers; N = 14 of each). Except for the initial mortality experienced by chicks departing from the colony, the mortality rate at sea was similar to the mortality rate at the colony. However, energy gain...
During breeding, animal behaviour is particularly sensitive to environmental and food resource avail...
Parental behaviour often exhibits plasticity to factors expected to affect the benefits or costs of ...
Earlier offspring mortality prior to independence saves resources for kin, which should be more bene...
The duration of parental care in animals varies widely, from none to lifelong. Such variation is typ...
Parentoffspring conflict theory predicts that offspring desertion would be adaptive for parents when...
Life history theory predicts that parents will balance benefits from investment in current offspring...
Seabirds exhibit considerable behavioural flexibility in foraging investment in order to meet the nu...
Evolutionary theory suggests that individuals can benefit from deferring the fitness cost of develop...
Parental care can lead to a conflict of interest between parents and offspring. For central place fo...
Feeding rates and mass loss during chick rearing were compared for individually marked parents of ma...
doi:10.1111/j.1469-7998.2006.00090.x Life-history theory predicts that adults of long-lived species ...
Variability in demographic traits between individuals within populations has profound implications f...
Procellariiformes (albatrosses and petrels) must accumulate substantial energy reserves to sustain t...
Offspring are often produced in excess as insurance against stochastic events or unpredictable resou...
Offspring are often produced in excess as insurance against stochastic events or unpredictable resou...
During breeding, animal behaviour is particularly sensitive to environmental and food resource avail...
Parental behaviour often exhibits plasticity to factors expected to affect the benefits or costs of ...
Earlier offspring mortality prior to independence saves resources for kin, which should be more bene...
The duration of parental care in animals varies widely, from none to lifelong. Such variation is typ...
Parentoffspring conflict theory predicts that offspring desertion would be adaptive for parents when...
Life history theory predicts that parents will balance benefits from investment in current offspring...
Seabirds exhibit considerable behavioural flexibility in foraging investment in order to meet the nu...
Evolutionary theory suggests that individuals can benefit from deferring the fitness cost of develop...
Parental care can lead to a conflict of interest between parents and offspring. For central place fo...
Feeding rates and mass loss during chick rearing were compared for individually marked parents of ma...
doi:10.1111/j.1469-7998.2006.00090.x Life-history theory predicts that adults of long-lived species ...
Variability in demographic traits between individuals within populations has profound implications f...
Procellariiformes (albatrosses and petrels) must accumulate substantial energy reserves to sustain t...
Offspring are often produced in excess as insurance against stochastic events or unpredictable resou...
Offspring are often produced in excess as insurance against stochastic events or unpredictable resou...
During breeding, animal behaviour is particularly sensitive to environmental and food resource avail...
Parental behaviour often exhibits plasticity to factors expected to affect the benefits or costs of ...
Earlier offspring mortality prior to independence saves resources for kin, which should be more bene...