No apparent trade-off between the quality of nest grown feathers and time spent in the nest in an aerial insectivore, the tree swallow
Life history theory provides a framework for understanding how trade-offs generate negative trait associations. Among nestling birds, time spent in the nest, risk of predation, and lifespan covary, but some associations are only found within species while others are only observed between species. A...
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Zusammenfassung: | Life history theory provides a framework for understanding how trade-offs
generate negative trait associations. Among nestling birds, time spent in
the nest, risk of predation, and lifespan covary, but some associations
are only found within species while others are only observed between
species. A recent comparative study suggests that allocation trade-offs
may be alleviated by disinvestment in ephemeral traits, such as nest-grown
feathers, that are quickly replaced. However, direct resource allocation
trade-offs cannot be inferred from inter-specific trait-associations
without complementary intra-specific studies. Here, we asked whether there
is evidence for a within-species allocation trade-off between feather
quality and time spent in the nest in tree swallows (Tachycineta bicolor).
Consistent with the idea that ephemeral traits are deprioritized,
nest-grown feathers had lower barb density than adult feathers. However,
despite substantial variation in fledging age among nestlings, there was
no evidence for a negative association between time in the nest and
feather quality. Furthermore, accounting for differences in resource
availability by considering provisioning rate and a nest predation
treatment did not reveal a trade-off that was masked by variation in
resources. Our results are most consistent with the idea that the
inter-specific association between development and feather quality arises
from adaptive specialization, rather than from a direct allocation
trade-off. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.t76hdr835 |