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Breeding success and the question of clutch size of Northwestern Crows Corvus caurinus
Authors:HOWARD RICHARDSON  NICOLAAS A. M. VERBEEK  ROBERT W. BUTLER
Affiliation:Department of Biological Sciences, Simon Eraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada V5A 1S6;Canadian Wildlife Service, Box 340, Delta, British Columbia, Canada V4K3Y3
Abstract:The breeding biology of two island populations of the Northwestern Crow was studied in British Columbia over a period of five years. Both populations laid an average of four eggs per clutch, of which approximately 75% hatched. More young survived to fledge on Mandate than on Mitlenatch Island. The young from nests close (< 100 m) to the beach on Mitlenatch had a higher survival rate than those from further inland. The number of eggs lost or failing to hatch was lowest in clutches of four eggs. There was a non-significant trend for chick survival to be inversely related to clutch size. The net result was that clutches of five eggs produced no more young than did clutches of four eggs. It is suggested that the major limiting factor on clutch size is food availability but the decreased hatching success of any remaining eggs once hatching has started is also a contributing factor.
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