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      Crop size as an index of chick provisioning in the Greater Flamingo Phoenicopterus roseus : Crop size as an index of provisioning

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      Ibis
      Wiley-Blackwell

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          On the misuse of residuals in ecology: testing regression residuals vs. the analysis of covariance

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            Integration and generalization of kappas for multiple raters.

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              Flexible foraging strategy of Cory's shearwater, Calonectris diomedea, during the chick-rearing period.

              Procellariiformes are well known for their low rates of food provisioning to their slow-growing chicks. In some species, the patterns of food delivery to chicks have been deduced from changes in their weight, obtained from periodic weighings. However, the behaviour of individual parents cannot be resolved using this method. In this study, we used a periodic weighing protocol with Cory's shearwater chicks on Selvagem Grande island, in the northeast Atlantic. In addition, we used an automatic logging system to examine the attendance of individual parents. In 1997, the chicks were fed infrequently, and were in significantly poorer condition, than in other years and at other colonies. This suggests that the adults were experiencing some difficulties in finding an adequate food supply close to the colony. Under these conditions, individual parents adopted a dual provisioning strategy, making both short and long foraging trips, a previously undescribed behaviour in any northern hemisphere petrel species. Although meals delivered to chicks were larger after long trips than after short trips, the average amount of food provisioned per day spent at sea decreased with increasing trip length, and so chicks did not benefit from longer trips. This finding suggests that long trips can be used to restore the adult's body condition, presumably depleted during short trips as shown previously for some petrels and albatrosses. The adoption of this flexible foraging strategy, which differs from the uniform intervals observed in Cory's shearwaters experiencing situations of 'normal' food abundance, may represent a mechanism through which breeding birds compromise between the needs of their chicks and the maintenance of their own body condition. Copyright 1998 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Ibis
                Wiley-Blackwell
                00191019
                April 2012
                April 2012
                : 154
                : 2
                : 379-388
                Article
                10.1111/j.1474-919X.2012.01218.x
                2c16e901-16e4-47d7-bd4a-6ce6c543be18
                © 2012

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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