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Prospectors’ colony attendance is sex-specific and increases future recruitment chances in a seabird

Prospectors’ colony attendance is sex-specific and increases future recruitment chances in a seabird
Prospectors’ colony attendance is sex-specific and increases future recruitment chances in a seabird
In most long-lived vertebrates, including seabirds, young non-breeders often attend potential breeding sites. In seabird colonies, this prospecting behaviour has nearly never been studied with respect to potential sex-specific benefits, and its fitness consequences are largely unknown. We compared attendance patterns of sexed common tern prospectors at six subcolonies with future breeding status and nesting site choice. We also tested for potential effects of population density. Birds that arrived earlier at the colony were recorded more often along the season. This arrival effect was stronger in males, which generally spent more time at the colony. Birds prospecting for two consecutive years attended the colony more intensively in the second year. A high colony attendance enhanced recruitment probability in both sexes, but only in females, it was linked with a higher probability to return. Attendance at a preferred subcolony increased during the season. For first breeding, individuals favoured the subcolony where they had prospected most intensively in the previous season. In males, this subcolony fidelity was stronger and increased simultaneously to breeding pair density. We conclude that prospecting is a process of integration into the community of breeders, and that benefits are higher for males, the more territorial sex in this species.
0376-6357
198-205
Dittmann, Tobias
f7855942-5839-45c7-9279-d0ca1ed5d4b7
Ezard, Thomas H.G.
a143a893-07d0-4673-a2dd-cea2cd7e1374
Becker, Peter H.
3fe56473-d701-4a54-badf-9d29b346bb25
Dittmann, Tobias
f7855942-5839-45c7-9279-d0ca1ed5d4b7
Ezard, Thomas H.G.
a143a893-07d0-4673-a2dd-cea2cd7e1374
Becker, Peter H.
3fe56473-d701-4a54-badf-9d29b346bb25

Dittmann, Tobias, Ezard, Thomas H.G. and Becker, Peter H. (2007) Prospectors’ colony attendance is sex-specific and increases future recruitment chances in a seabird. Behavioural Processes, 76 (3), 198-205. (doi:10.1016/j.beproc.2007.05.002). (PMID:17587512)

Record type: Article

Abstract

In most long-lived vertebrates, including seabirds, young non-breeders often attend potential breeding sites. In seabird colonies, this prospecting behaviour has nearly never been studied with respect to potential sex-specific benefits, and its fitness consequences are largely unknown. We compared attendance patterns of sexed common tern prospectors at six subcolonies with future breeding status and nesting site choice. We also tested for potential effects of population density. Birds that arrived earlier at the colony were recorded more often along the season. This arrival effect was stronger in males, which generally spent more time at the colony. Birds prospecting for two consecutive years attended the colony more intensively in the second year. A high colony attendance enhanced recruitment probability in both sexes, but only in females, it was linked with a higher probability to return. Attendance at a preferred subcolony increased during the season. For first breeding, individuals favoured the subcolony where they had prospected most intensively in the previous season. In males, this subcolony fidelity was stronger and increased simultaneously to breeding pair density. We conclude that prospecting is a process of integration into the community of breeders, and that benefits are higher for males, the more territorial sex in this species.

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Published date: 2007
Organisations: Environmental

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 344734
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/344734
ISSN: 0376-6357
PURE UUID: cff48897-16bb-4e49-b8a4-9bcce52913b5
ORCID for Thomas H.G. Ezard: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8305-6605

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Date deposited: 11 Feb 2013 13:47
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:46

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Contributors

Author: Tobias Dittmann
Author: Thomas H.G. Ezard ORCID iD
Author: Peter H. Becker

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