Data from: Preparation for flight: pre-fledging exercise time is correlated with growth and fledging age in burrow-nesting seabirds
Chicks of many burrow-nesting seabirds are known to repeatedly emerge from their nests (these trips being termed “excursions”) and exercise their wings prior to fledging, but this behavior is poorly documented in the literature, and thus the relationship between growth and exercise remains unclear....
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Zusammenfassung: | Chicks of many burrow-nesting seabirds are known to repeatedly emerge from
their nests (these trips being termed “excursions”) and exercise their
wings prior to fledging, but this behavior is poorly documented in the
literature, and thus the relationship between growth and exercise remains
unclear. Here, we used infrared video cameras placed in front of streaked
shearwater (Calonectris leucomelas) nests during the chick-emergence
period to examine correlations between chick excursions and parameters
known to be important for juvenile survival after fledging. In addition,
we also attached acceleration-temperature loggers to several chicks in
order to evaluate the relationship between excursion time and time spent
exercising the wing muscles (i.e. flapping). Chicks that undertook longer
excursions exhibited more rapid increases in wing length and larger body
masses at fledging, and also fledged earlier. Correlations between
fitness-related parameters and excursion time indicate that excursions
during the emergence period might offer insights into the various
relationships between growth and behavior and/or the mechanisms underlying
offspring survival following fledging. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.2c1c9 |