Parents often invest a substantial amount of energy in raising offspring. How much they do so depends on several environmental factors and on the extent they cooperate to raise the offspring. In birds, males can feed incubating females, which may allow females to stay longer on the nest, which, in turn, may ultimately improve reproductive success. The interplay between environmental factors and such incubation feeding on incubation attendance has, however, received little attention. Here, we show that favourable circumstances (higher ambient temperature and food availability) allowed incubating blue tit females to increase the time off the nest to improve self-maintenance and males to feed them less, whereas males also fed inexperienced par...
In seasonally reproducing organisms, timing reproduction to match food availability is key to indivi...
Nest attentiveness (percentage of time spent on the nest) during incubation represents a parent-offs...
Abstract Background Effective communication between sexual partners is essential for successful repr...
Parents often invest a substantial amount of energy in raising offspring. How much they do so depend...
The incubation of eggs plays a key role in avian parental care. To ensure embryo development, incuba...
Evolution of parental care behaviour has been of considerable interest to behavioural ecologists for...
Incubating birds must trade-off leaving the nest to forage with staying on the nest to maintain opti...
Graduation date: 2013Access restricted to the OSU Community at author's request from March 13, 2013 ...
In biparental birds, the relative contribution of the sexes to parental care can be viewed as a co-o...
Background: Parental care often increases offspring survival, but is costly to the parents. A trade-...
Biparental care in birds is less common during incubation than in other nesting stages. Males share ...
Abstract Background Parental care often increases offspring survival, but is costly to the parents. ...
Avian embryos need a stable thermal environment to develop optimally, while incubat-ing females need...
Ambient temperature is assumed to be the major cue used by passerines to synchronize their laying an...
In seasonally reproducing organisms, timing reproduction to match food availability is key to indivi...
Nest attentiveness (percentage of time spent on the nest) during incubation represents a parent-offs...
Abstract Background Effective communication between sexual partners is essential for successful repr...
Parents often invest a substantial amount of energy in raising offspring. How much they do so depend...
The incubation of eggs plays a key role in avian parental care. To ensure embryo development, incuba...
Evolution of parental care behaviour has been of considerable interest to behavioural ecologists for...
Incubating birds must trade-off leaving the nest to forage with staying on the nest to maintain opti...
Graduation date: 2013Access restricted to the OSU Community at author's request from March 13, 2013 ...
In biparental birds, the relative contribution of the sexes to parental care can be viewed as a co-o...
Background: Parental care often increases offspring survival, but is costly to the parents. A trade-...
Biparental care in birds is less common during incubation than in other nesting stages. Males share ...
Abstract Background Parental care often increases offspring survival, but is costly to the parents. ...
Avian embryos need a stable thermal environment to develop optimally, while incubat-ing females need...
Ambient temperature is assumed to be the major cue used by passerines to synchronize their laying an...
In seasonally reproducing organisms, timing reproduction to match food availability is key to indivi...
Nest attentiveness (percentage of time spent on the nest) during incubation represents a parent-offs...
Abstract Background Effective communication between sexual partners is essential for successful repr...