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Body mass patterns of Little Stints at different latitudes during incubation and chick-rearing
Authors:Ingrid Tulp  Hans Schekkerman  Przemek Chylarecki  Pavel Tomkovich  Mikhail Soloviev  Leo Bruinzeel  Klaas van Dijk  Olavi Hildén  Hermann Hötker  Wojciech Kania  Marc van Roomen  Arkadiusz Sikora  & Ron Summers
Institution:Foundation Working Group International Waterbird and Wetland Research, c/o PO Box 925, 3700 AX Zeist, The Netherlands;Alterra, PO Box 47, 6700 AA Wageningen, The Netherlands;Ornithological Station, Institute of Ecology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Nadwislanska 108, 80680 Gdansk, Poland;Zoological Museum, Bolshaya Nikitskaya Str. 6, 103009 Moscow, Russia;Department of Vertebrate Zoology and General Ecology, Biological Faculty, Moscow State University, 119899 Moscow, Russia;Forschungs- und Technologiezentrum Westküste der Christian-Albrechts-Universität, 25761 Büsum, Germany;Lismore, Mill Crescent, North Kessock, Inverness IV1 1XY, UK
Abstract:Due to the ‘double‐clutch’ mating system found in the arctic‐breeding Little Stint Calidris minuta, each parent cares for a clutch and brood alone. The resulting constraint on feeding time, combined with the cold climate and a small body size, may cause energetic bottlenecks. Based on the notion that mass stores in birds serve as an ‘insurance’ for transient periods of negative energy balance, but entail certain costs as well, body mass may vary in relation to climatic conditions and stage of the breeding cycle. We studied body mass in Little Stints in relation to breeding stage and geographical location, during 17 expeditions to 12 sites in the Eurasian Arctic, ranging from north Norway to north‐east Taimyr. Body mass was higher during incubation than during chick‐rearing. Structural size, as estimated by wing length, increased with latitude. This was probably caused by relatively more females (the larger sex) incubating further north, possibly after leaving a first clutch to be incubated by a male further south. Before and after correction for structural size, body mass was strongly related to latitude during both incubation and chick‐rearing. In analogy to a similar geographical pattern in overwintering shorebirds, we interpret the large energy stores of breeding Little Stints as an insurance against periods of cold weather which are a regular feature of arctic summers. Climate data showed that the risk of encountering cold spells lasting several days increases with latitude over the species’ breeding range, and is larger in June than in July. Maintaining these stores is therefore less necessary at southern sites and during the chick‐rearing period than in the incubation period. When guarding chicks, feeding time is less constrained than during incubation, temperatures tend to be higher than in the incubation period, reducing energy expenditure, and the availability of insect prey reaches a seasonal maximum. However, the alternative interpretation that the chick‐tending period is more energetically stressful than the incubation period, resulting in a negative energy balance for the parent, could not be rejected on the present evidence.
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