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      Temporal and Individual Variation in Offspring Provisioning by Tree Swallows: A New Method of Automated Nest Attendance Monitoring

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      PLoS ONE
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          Abstract

          Studies of the ecology and evolution of avian nesting behavior have been limited by the difficulty and expense of sampling nest attendance behavior across entire days or throughout a substantial portion of the nestling period. Direct observation of nesting birds using human observers and most automated devices requires sub-sampling of the nestling period, which does not allow for the quantification of the duration of chick-feeding by parents within a day, and may also inadequately capture temporal variation in the rate at which chicks are fed. Here I describe an inexpensive device, the Automated Perch Recorder (APR) system, which collects accurate, long-term data on hourly rates of nest visitation, the duration of a pair's workday, and the total number of visits the pair makes to their nest across the entire period for which it is deployed. I also describe methods for verifying the accuracy of the system in the field, and several examples of how these data can be used to explore the causes of variation in and tradeoffs between the rate at which birds feed their chicks and the total length of time birds spend feeding chicks in a day.

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          A Note on the Delta Method

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            Parental care and clutch sizes in North and South American birds.

            The evolutionary causes of small clutch sizes in tropical and Southern Hemisphere regions are poorly understood. Alexander Skutch proposed 50 years ago that higher nest predation in the south constrains the rate at which parent birds can deliver food to young and thereby constrains clutch size by limiting the number of young that parents can feed. This hypothesis for explaining differences in clutch size and parental behaviors between latitudes has remained untested. Here, a detailed study of bird species in Arizona and Argentina shows that Skutch's hypothesis explains clutch size variation within North and South America. However, neither Skutch's hypothesis nor two major alternatives explain differences between latitudes.
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              Ecological adaptations for breeding in birds

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: Editor
                Journal
                PLoS ONE
                plos
                plosone
                PLoS ONE
                Public Library of Science (San Francisco, USA )
                1932-6203
                2009
                1 January 2009
                : 4
                : 1
                : e4111
                Affiliations
                [1]Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, California, United States of America
                University of Bristol, United Kingdom
                Author notes

                Conceived and designed the experiments: APR. Performed the experiments: APR. Analyzed the data: APR. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: APR. Wrote the paper: APR.

                Article
                08-PONE-RA-05229R2
                10.1371/journal.pone.0004111
                2606023
                19119316
                af63a2d5-3f79-4d35-8612-1a18ae4c7c68
                Rose. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
                History
                : 22 June 2008
                : 14 November 2008
                Page count
                Pages: 8
                Categories
                Research Article
                Ecology/Behavioral Ecology
                Ecology/Evolutionary Ecology
                Evolutionary Biology/Animal Behavior

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