Brood size and the cost of provisioning nestlings: interpreting Lack's hypothesis

A recent model of parental provisioning (the "tradeoff model") suggests that the maximum delivery rate of food to nestlings represents a tradeoff between parental residual reproductive value and nestling survival. In contrast, Lack's hypothesis suggests that maximum provisioning rate...

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Veröffentlicht in:Oecologia 1993-11, Vol.96 (2), p.290-292
Hauptverfasser: Conrad, K.F. (Queen's Univ. Kingston, Ontario (Canada). Dept. of Biology), Robertson, R.J
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A recent model of parental provisioning (the "tradeoff model") suggests that the maximum delivery rate of food to nestlings represents a tradeoff between parental residual reproductive value and nestling survival. In contrast, Lack's hypothesis suggests that maximum provisioning rate determines brood size and therefore delivery rates are limited by shortages of food or foraging time, not by tradeoffs of parental investment. Several authors have examined the shape of the per-nestling feeding curves to test the tradeoff model against Lack's hypothesis. It is shown that Lack's hypothesis can produce per-nestling feeding curves consistent with the tradeoff model. Therefore, the shape of the per-nestling feeding curve cannot be used to distinguish between the models. Lack's hypothesis, Parental investment, Feeding nestlings, Clutch size, Tradeoff model
ISSN:0029-8549
1432-1939
DOI:10.1007/BF00317744