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1.
2.
ABSTRACT Infanticide and nonfatal aggression by adults toward unfamiliar chicks have been widely reported in colonial birds, and can be an important cause of chick mortality. We studied intraspecific aggression by adults toward chicks at a South American Tern (Sterna hirundinacea) colony in Patagonia, Argentina, during 2005 to characterize this behavior, evaluate its relationship with nesting density, chick age and microhabitat characteristics, and assess its effect on breeding success. Of 111 chicks in the study area, 45% were attacked at least once. Chicks older than 9 d posthatching were more likely to be attacked than younger chicks, and unattended chicks were more likely to be attacked than guarded chicks (88 vs. 12%). Chicks were also attacked more often when in their own territories (76% of cases), but were less likely to be attacked in territories with more vegetation cover and high‐quality shelters (i.e., vegetation with characteristics that prevented adults from reaching chicks). The number of aggression events was not related to nest density. At least 8% of the chicks in our study area died as a result of adult intraspecific aggression. Our results indicate that intraspecific aggression by adult South American Terns toward chicks is relatively common in the Punta Loma colony and should not be underestimated as a factor affecting their breeding success.  相似文献   

3.
During January and February of 2002 and 2003, we studied the diet of the Antarctic Tern Sterna vittata gaini at two colonies in Nelson Island, South Shetland Islands, by identifying the prey fed to chicks by breeders. The fish Notothenia coriiceps was the main prey in both seasons, followed by the myctophid Electrona antarctica, Antarctic krill Euphausia superba and gammarid amphipods. The contribution of fish to the diet increased as chicks grew older. Fish and amphipods were brought to chicks during the day, whereas adults brought Antarctic krill at sunrise and sunset. Both the duration of the feeding trips and the number of trips per foraging bout varied according to the type of prey caught. Preliminary information suggests that, among other causes, the foraging strategy is strongly influenced by the predation pressure of skuas on chicks. Results are compared with the only two previous study on the diet of the Antarctic Tern at the South Shetland Islands.  相似文献   

4.
European starlings (Sturnus vulgaris) are responsible for high rates of egg predation at one of the main colonies of the endangered roseate tern (Sterna dougallii) in the Azores archipelago. Control taste aversion has been effective in controlling raven predation in a colony of California least tern (Sterna antillarum browni), but there is little quantitative information about its efficacy on other species of predators taking eggs. We conducted a control taste aversion experiment on yellow-legged gulls (Larus michahellis) and European starlings eating eggs of terns in a mixed colony of common (Sterna hirundo) and roseate terns in the Azores. We treated quail (Coturnix coturnix) eggs with methiocarb and deployed them in artificial nests in the tern colony. On the first experiment, conducted before the terns laid eggs, predation rates on quail eggs by yellow-legged gulls showed significant and rapid decrease after deployment of treated eggs. During the second experiment, after the terns had started laying, results were mixed. Although predation rates by European starlings on treated quail eggs decreased, predation rates on tern eggs did not. We conclude that control taste aversion using methiocarb-treated eggs is likely to reduce depredation by gulls but not starlings because of the need to pre-train the birds and the tendency of starlings to be attracted by the movement of adults, not the presence of nests.  相似文献   

5.
How a Common Tern (Sterna hirundo) Colony Defends itself against Herring Gulls (Larus argentatus) The subject of this study is the anti-predator behaviour of a small common tern colony near a large herring gull colony on the island of Mellum, West Germany (Fig. 1). In 1980 the number of gulls crossing this tern colony increased during the terns' chick-stage (Fig. 4). Observed predation of tern chicks was independent of tide and time of day (3., Fig. 5). The frequency of tern reactions corresponded to the number of herring gull crossings (Fig. 5, Table 1). The terns' responses increased between morning and evening (Fig. 8). Tern up-flights and attacks increased absolutely and as a percentage, with the advance of the breeding season (Fig. 3, 4). They were positively correlated with the observed chick predation and the number of pairs with chicks, most markedly with chicks older than 5 days (Figs. 3, 4; Table 1). This increased defence was maintained by fewer pairs as, by then, many had lost their own broods (Fig. 4). As the breeding season progressed, herring gulls increasingly became the main cause of tern up-flights and the object of the attacks (Figs. 9–11). The up-flights of the whole colony, which occurred frequently and spontaneously during incubation, were observed only rarely after hatching and were almost exclusively a response to herring gulls (Figs. 10, 12). The lower herring gulls flew over the colony, the more frequently common terns flew up or attacked and the more individuals were involved in these responses (Figs. 6, 13, 14). During the breeding period, communal up-flights and attacks by terns increased as a percentage (Figs. 12, 13, 15–17). Group-attacks effected changes in the gulls' flying-routes more often than did individual attacks (Fig. 18). Despite the defence behaviour and its adaptation to the predation pressure, herring gulls often succeeded in robbing chicks. This is why the breeding success of the common tern was poor (< 0.4 chicks/nest). Possible reasons for this are discussed.  相似文献   

6.
Fitness consequences of variation in body mass growth and body condition were studied in a Sandwich Tern Sterna sandvicensis colony on Griend, Dutch Wadden Sea, during 1990–2000. Body mass increment during the linear growth phase predicted nestling survival probabilities accurately. Chicks growing less than 8 g per day had low survival probabilities until fledging, but within a range of 8–11 g per day growth only small effects on chick survival were observed. Effects of slow growth on survival became obvious after about 10 days after hatching. Slow growing chicks reached a much lower fledging mass, whereas slow growth had only small effects on structural size at fledging. Body condition of the chicks was highly variable and had strong effects on survival until fledging. However, body condition during the nestling stage did not influence post-fledging survival. Body condition at fledging had no effects on post-fledging survival and did not affect final mass or body size. It is argued that low fledging mass can be overcome soon after fledging, as parents take their fledglings closer to the foraging areas, thereby avoiding high rates of kleptoparasitism by Black-headed Gulls Larus ridibundus .  相似文献   

7.
《Ostrich》2013,84(3):287-289
Morphology of Swift Tern Thalasseus bergii bergii eggs was examined on Robben Island, South Africa. A recently formed colony was found abandoned en masse, probably following human disturbance, and 146 freshly laid eggs were collected. The mean±SD nest density was 7±2.5 nests m?2 and 3% of nests contained two eggs. Eggs ranged in shape from oval to pyriform and displayed black markings (blotched, streaked, scrawled or speckled) overlaying the eggs’ colour. The mean length and width of a sample of 105 eggs was 62.2?mm (56.3–66.9?mm) and 42.3?mm (39.8–45.3?mm), respectively. All collected eggs were weighed and the mean mass was 57.9±3.72?g. Estimated volume of eggs was calculated to be 56.3±3.74 cm3. This is the first report of mass measurements obtained from freshly laid eggs Swift Tern eggs and provides insight on egg morphology, for which knowledge is limited for this species.  相似文献   

8.
Ntiamoa-Baidu, Y. & Nuoh, A. A. 2000. The role of the Ghana coast in the annual cycle of migratory terns. Ostrich 71 (1 & 2): 183.

Data are presented on counts of migratory terns on the Ghana coast over a ten-year period, 1986–1996. Fourteen species of terns were recorded during the period. Influx of terns begins in late August, peaking in September/October, with the highest likelihood of tern occurrence on the Ghana coast recorded in August-November and April-May. Terns fed mostly offshore and used the coastal lagoons as roosting sites, although a few species e.g. Black Tern Chlidonias niger and Little Tern Sterna albifrons, foraged also on the lagoons. Two sites, Songor Lagoon and Densu Delta, regularly held over 50 % of the total count recorded for all sites. A comparison of the day-time counts with dusk roost counts indicate that the day time counts under-represent the total numbers of terns using the Ghana coast. Trends in the populations of the four most abundant tern species: Black Tern, Common Tern Sterna hirundo, Sandwich Tern S. sandvicensis and Royal Tern S. maxima, are analysed; and the implications for conservation of the species are discussed.  相似文献   

9.
Robert Simmons  Steve Braine 《Ostrich》2013,84(3-4):264-273
Simmons, R. & Braine, S. 1994. Breeding, foraging, trapping and sexing of Damara Terns in the Skeleton Coast Park, Namibia. Ostrich 65:264-273.

This paper details 6 years' monitoring of breeding Damara Terns Sterna balaenarum on Namibia's northwestern coast. We report new breeding distribution records, factors limiting success on the desert coast and detail two new methods of catching terns and a new sexing technique. Nests occurred as far north as the Cunene River mouth and occurred mainly on open gravel plains up to 8 km from the coast. Eggs occurred over an 8 month period with a peak in January. Of 66 nests monitored on a daily basis, 72% succesfully hatched, and most of those failing were taken by mammals. Incubation was slightly shorter than reported previously (19.2 d), and heavier chicks emerged from larger eggs. Adult plunge diving success was low and records indicate Skeleton Coast Damara Terns brought mainly needle fish Tylosurus sp. to their nestlings. Two new methods to capture adults were developed, noose catching and hand capture, both of which avoided nest desertions, and had success rates of up to 70%. Morphologically the sexes differed significantly in bill size, allowing a simple and efficient means to separate male and female terns. We conclude that Damara Tern populations are more extensive than previously thought and further ringing and monitoring of food resources is encouraged.  相似文献   

10.
Survivorship of Little Tern Sterna albifrons eggs and chicks was followed on an islet in the Nakdong Estuary, Republic of Korea, in 1995 and 1996. Mean egg size and incubation period were significantly different between the 2 years. The maximum clutch size was three eggs, and the second egg in the clutch often hatched earlier than the first, while most of the third eggs hatched last. In 1996, when the fate of 249 eggs from 106 nests was followed for 40 days, hatching success, fledging success and breeding success were 77%, 40% and 31%, respectively. High mortality occurred in the early chick stage, mostly because of rain and predation by Weasels Mustela sibirica. The breeding success per egg was 14% in one-egg clutches, 28% in two-egg clutches and 34% in three-egg clutches. This difference was mainly attributed to the lower hatching success in the smaller clutches. In three-egg clutches, the third egg showed significantly lower breeding success than siblings. The main foods of the Little Tern were Tridentiger obscurus, Engraulis japonicus, Hyporhamphus intermedius, Acanthogobius flavimanus (all fish), Palaemon sp. and Crangon affinis (shrimps). The feeding frequency was, apparently, not affected by time of day and age of chicks but was probably influenced by weather conditions. Newly hatched chicks failed to eat 25% of the prey brought to them, although this decreased with the age of the chicks.  相似文献   

11.
Ambrose A. Lane 《Ostrich》2013,84(1):17-20
Randall, R. M. &; Randall, B. M. 1981. Roseate Tern breeding biology and factors responsible for low chick production in Algoa Bay, South Africa. Ostrich 52:17-24.

Roseate Terns Sterna dougallii were studied in 1977 on St Croix Island, Algoa Bay, South Africa. They are winter breeders in Algoa Bay and remain away from the breeding islands until about three weeks before the first eggs are laid. Full breeding dress is usually attained by the time the chicks hatch, when red appears on the culmen. Reasons are given for regarding the red culmen as an intraspecific aggressive signal. Nest density was 0,2/m2 with a mean nearest neighbour distance of 0,66 m ± 0,27 m. Mean size of first clutches was 1,32 eggs, of replacement clutches was 1,03 eggs. Eggs measured 42,1 mm (39,8-44,5 mm) x 30,1 mm (28,6-31,5 mm). In clutches of two eggs, first eggs had significantly larger volumes than second eggs. Incubation took about 25 days and one of the pair did most of the incubating. Rearing took less than 28 days and all the terns had left the island a week after the last chick first flew. Human disturbance, gull predation, intraspecific aggression, and rain were factors contributing to the low production of 33 flying young in 1977. An estimated production of 79 flying young was calculated as necessary to maintain the population of 74 breeding pairs.  相似文献   

12.
We studied the impact of a wind farm (line of 25 small to medium sized turbines) on birds at the eastern port breakwater in Zeebrugge, Belgium, with special attention to the nearby breeding colony of Common Tern Sterna hirundo, Sandwich Tern Sterna sandvicensis and Little Tern Sterna albifrons. With the data of found collision fatalities under the wind turbines, and the correction factors for available search area, search efficiency and scavenging, we calculated that during the breeding seasons in 2004 and 2005, about 168 resp. 161 terns collided with the wind turbines located on the eastern port breakwater close to the breeding colony, mainly Common Terns and Sandwich Terns. The mean number of terns killed in 2004 and 2005 was 6.7 per turbine per year for the whole wind farm, and 11.2 resp. 10.8 per turbine per year for the line of 14 turbines on the sea-directed breakwater close to the breeding colony. The mean number of collision fatalities when including other species (mainly gulls) in 2004 and 2005 was 20.9 resp. 19.1 per turbine per year for the whole wind farm and 34.3 resp. 27.6 per turbine per year for 14 turbines on the sea-directed breakwater. The collision probability for Common Terns crossing the line of wind turbines amounted 0.110–0.118% for flights at rotor height and 0.007–0.030% for all flights. For Sandwich Tern this probability was 0.046–0.088% for flights at rotor height and 0.005–0.006% for all flights. The breeding terns were almost not disturbed by the wind turbines, but the relative large number of tern fatalities was determined as a significant negative impact on the breeding colony at the eastern port breakwater (additional mortality of 3.0–4.4% for Common Tern, 1.8–6.7% for Little Tern and 0.6–0.7% for Sandwich Tern). We recommend that there should be precautionary avoidance of constructing wind turbines close to any important breeding colony of terns or gulls, nor should artificial breeding sites be constructed near wind turbines, especially not within the frequent foraging flight paths.  相似文献   

13.
I. Newton 《Bird Study》2013,60(3):372-376
Capsule?Body mass of Whiskered Tern chicks from the central parts of subcolonies grew at a higher rate in comparison to chicks hatched in the peripheral zones. Growth rates of both body mass and head length correlated positively with nest density. We suggest that spatial distribution of pair quality within the colony of Whiskered Terns follows a central–periphery gradient.  相似文献   

14.
The behaviour and ecology of Franklin's gull were studied at Agassiz National Wildlife Refuge in northwestern Minnesota to determine the adaptations of the species for nesting in marshes. Two factors seemed to be important in colony site selection: cattail dispersion pattern and cattail density. Franklin's gulls prefer to nest in cattail areas closest to open water. The number of nests per unit area decreased as cattail density increased. Nest site selection is dependent on aggression and visibility. Visibility from nest level is the result of cattail placement and height. The distance between nests was directly correlated with visibility. Aggression by gulls on nests was lowered experimentally by decreasing visibility and raised by increasing visibility. Nest platforms were constructed of cattail material, and were attached to cattail stems. Nest material was added to the nests throughout the incubation and brooding period. Material was usually added following nest relief. The egg laying period was from 6 to 28 May. There was more synchrony of egg laying in sub-areas of the colony than in the colony as a whole. Successive eggs in clutches were laid at 24- to 48-hr intervals. The distance between nests decreased during the season as pairs filled in areas that were not defended. Territorial pairs defended an area up to 10 m from their stations prior to egg laying, but defended only the area within 3 m of their nests during incubation. Both members of pairs incubated the eggs and cared for the young. The incubation period was 24 days. The primary predators on adults and young were marsh hawk, great horned owl and mink. Franklin's gulls do not eat eggs or young of gulls. Adults fed on earthworms, insects and grain. Most marked adults fed within 16 km of the colony. Chicks were fed primarily on earthworms. The hatching period was from 30 May to 21 June. Chicks of all ages tested on a visual cliff apparatus were able to perceive the drop. Chicks tested on a 30-degree incline apparatus walked up it when 6 days old and younger, and walked down at 12 days of age and older. Brood mobility was less than in ground nesting species of gulls. In an undisturbed colony the chicks remained on the nest platforms until they were 25 to 30 days old although they were capable of swimming shortly after hatching. Individual recognition between parents and chicks appeared later in this species than in ground-nesting gulls. Adults accepted alien chicks (experimentally exchanged) that were younger than about 14 days old until their own chicks were over that age. Adults accepted larger and older broods than their own, as well as broods of mixed ages. Chicks began to react differently to strange adults at about 16 days of age. The breeding chronology of Franklin's gull is compressed when compared to that of other gulls. Possible selection pressures affecting this synchrony are discussed. The behaviour of the marsh-nesting Franklin's gull is compared with that of typical ground-and cliffnesting gulls; the possibility that the ancestral gull may have been a marsh nester is discussed.  相似文献   

15.
G. L. Maclean 《Ostrich》2013,84(3-4):241-253
Maclean, G. L. 1973. The Sociable Weaver, Part 4: Predators, parasites and symbionts. Ostrich 44: 241–253.

The main nest predator of the Sociable Weaver in the Kalahari sandveld is the Cape Cobra Nala nivea. This snake causes great losses of eggs and chicks; one cobra may eat the contents of an entire nest mass at one feed. Another nest predator which causes smaller losses of eggs and chicks but great destruction to the nest masses is the Honey Badger Mellivora capensis. These are the only two nest predators on the Sociable Weaver in the study area. Predators on adult Sociable Weavers include several birds of prey and some small carnivorous mammals.

Adult Sociable Weavers have few ectoparasites and hardly any Mallophaga. A common ectoparasite on the legs of chicks is a blood-sucking Dermestes larva, which appears not to be harmful. The only endoparasite found was the nematode, Diplotriaena ozouxi, which infected the abdominal air sacs of the adults.

The nest material of the Sociable Weavers' communal nest masses was inhabited by a wealth of invertebrate animals and a few harmless reptiles such as skinks and geckos.

Some of the chambers in a Sociable Weaver nest mass may be taken over by other species of birds. Most of these, such as Redheaded Finches Amadina erythrocephala, use the chambers for breeding purposes only, but the most important avian symbiont, the Pygmy Falcon Polihierax semitorquatus, is a permanent resident in the chambers. The presence of Pygmy Falcons is resented by the weavers but the falcons may help to keep snakes away from the nest mass. Adult Sociable Weavers are not normally preyed on by Pygmy Falcons, although the falcons may occasionally take young weavers in the nest chambers.

The tops of the nest masses may be used as nest sites by the Giant Eagle Owl Bubo lacteus. Barn Owls Tyto alba may use cavities in the superstructure of nest masses for roosting in. Neither of these owls appeared to prey on the weavers.  相似文献   

16.
Summary 1. Sandwich terns(Sterna sandvicensis) of a colony in the Dutch Wadden Sea, which were seen dying in tremors and convulsions, were analysed for their contents of chlorinated hydrocarbon insecticides. These proved to be present in considerable concentrations.2. The concentrations found were compared to those present in chickens of hens, poisoned in the laboratory. The amounts present in the dying or dead Sandwich terns were high enough to cause their death.3. Tern eggs from different coastal places in Ireland, Great Britain, The Netherlands and West Germany were sampled and analysed for these compounds. The amounts of dieldrin, telodrin and endrin in the eggs from the first two countries were much lower than those in the eggs from the last two ones. The amounts of DDE were quite the same.4. Tern food fishes(Clupea sprattus, Clupea harengus andAmmodytes lanceolatus) were sampled in the Dutch Wadden Sea and analysed. They contained considerable amounts of chlorinated hydrocarbon insecticides.5. Mussels(Mytilus edulis) were sampled at a series of locations alongside the Dutch coast. The highest concentrations of the insecticides were found on places near the mouth of the river Rhine. Also telodrin, an insecticide not used in Europe, was found.6. A big insecticide producing industry near the mouth of the river Rhine was informed of these facts. Measures taken by this form resulted in a decrease of the amounts of telodrin in the coastal North Sea environment.
Rückstände von chlorierten Kohlenwasserstoff-Insektiziden im Lebensraum der Nordsee
Kurzfassung In einer großen Brutkolonie von Brandseeschwalben(Sterna sandvicensis) auf der Insel Griend im holländischen Wattenmeer war die Anzahl der Brutvögel von > 20 000 Paaren im Jahre 1955 auf etwa 1000 Paare im Jahre 1965 zurückgegangen. Viele Vögel wurden tot oder sterbend mit Krampfsymptomen aufgefunden. Organe und Blut dieser Vögel wurden auf ihren Gehalt an nerventoxischen Stoffen, insbesondere an chlorierten Kohlenwasserstoff-Insektiziden, untersucht. Die Konzentrationen wurden mit denen von Jungvögeln verglichen, die im Laboratorium auf künstliche Weise mit diesen Stoffen versehen worden waren und daran auch starben. Es konnte somit nachgewiesen werden, daß die in den Brandseeschwalben gefundenen Konzentrationen zum Tod der Tiere geführt haben. Die an verschiedenen Orten gesammelten Eier der Brandseeschwalben wurden ebenfalls untersucht. Eier aus den Niederlanden und aus Deutschland enthielten deutlich mehr Endrin, Dieldrin und Telodrin als Eier aus England und Irland. Verschiedene Fischarten(Clupea sprattus, Clupea harengus, Ammodytes lanceolatus), die von den Brandseeschwalben gefressen werden, wurden im holländischen Wattenmeer gesammelt und analysiert; sie enthielten beträchtliche Mengen an chlorierten Kohlenwasserstoff-Insektiziden. Der Herkunft dieser Stoffe wurde durch Untersuchungen von Miesmuscheln(Mytilus edulis) nachgegangen, die an verschiedenen Stellen entlang der holländischen Küsten gesammelt wurden. Die größten Insektizid-Konzentrationen wurden in Miesmuscheln gefunden, die aus dem Gebiet der Rheinmündung stammten. Einem dort gelegenen chemischen Werk, das diese Insektenvertilgungsmittel herstellt, wurden die Untersuchungsergebnisse mitgeteilt. Zugleich wurden geeignete Maßnahmen vorgeschlagen, um das Einleiten von insektizidhaltigen Abwässern zu verhindern. Augenscheinlich hat inzwischen die Konzentration einiger dieser Stoffe inMytilus edulis abgenommen.
  相似文献   

17.
Weavers build domed, long-lasting nests that may also be adopted by other species for breeding, probably reducing the energetic costs of nest building to varying degrees. In an extensive literature search, 57 species were found to have at least one record of adopting a weaver nest. There is one known obligate nest user, the Pygmy Falcon Polihierax semitorquatus. Four species were classed as near obligate nest adopters. Four species were listed as common, 10 as occasional, and 38 species as rare nest adopters. Other than the falcon and lovebirds Agapornis species, these nest adopters are passerines. Of the 57 species of nest adopters, 35 species had confirmed eggs and/or chicks found in the weaver nests. Most nest adopter species were in the Estrildidae family (20 species), with three estrildids classed as near obligates. This was followed by the Muscicapidae family, species that build cup nests. By building their cup nests inside weaver nests, there is likely protection from adverse weather and predators. Overall, there appeared to be a large diversity of nest adopter species for the traditional savanna living weavers (Ploceus, Bubalornis, Anaplectes, Plocepasser and Philetairus).  相似文献   

18.
Metal distribution in an organism at any one time is a resultant of many extrinsic and intrinsic factors. Improved analytic methodology has made it feasible to obtain highly sensitive determinations for many metals in a single sample. Thus, it is now feasible to examine patterns of metal distribution. We report on a study of the effect of age on metal patterns in the common tern,Sterna hirundo, a fisheating seabird. We contrast the levels of nine metals in the liver of adult and young terns and compared these with levels in tern eggs. Unlike many previous studies, adults did not have significantly higher levels of metals, although for most metals, levels in eggs were significantly lower than liver levels of young and adults. The intermetal correlations showed more significant positive correlations for adults and eggs than for chicks, the latter showing instead a correlational chaos, probably reflecting the immaturity of their physiologic defense mechanisms and the absence of dynamic equilibrium.  相似文献   

19.
ABSTRACT Collecting blood from neonatal or prehatched chicks is sometimes necessary, requiring specialized blood collection techniques and skills. However, such sampling can be difficult and could potentially have adverse effects. I developed a method for collecting blood from chicks still in an egg. The technique involves enlarging the pipping hole, removing the chick's head to take blood from a jugular vein, and returning the chick into its original position in the egg to complete hatching back in the nest. I used this technique on Crested Tern (Thalasseus bergii) chicks (N= 13), with no apparent adverse effects to growth or short‐term survival. The amount of blood extracted (0.1–0.15 ml) was sufficient for a blood smear, hematocrit, and total white blood cell count. This method should be useful for eggs as small as 40 mm in length; eggs smaller than this would likely not be good candidates for this technique because eggshells may be too thin to safely handle. This technique may be useful for investigators studying the immunological and endocrinological transition between embryos and hatchlings.  相似文献   

20.
N. J. PHILLIPS 《Ibis》1987,129(1):10-24
During 1981–1983 the population of White-tailed Tropicbirds Phaethon lepturus at Cousin Island, Seychelles, bred aseasonally and asynchronously. The mean interval between consecutive successful breeding attempts was 273 days. Most individuals nested in the same site, and with the same partner, in successive attempts, but 7-5% of nest sites were used by more than one pair; 21 % of pairs which lost eggs, and 13% of those which lost chicks re-nested. Incubation lasted 40–41 days, with a mean incubation shift length of 6-6 days. Fledging periods varied between 67 and 89 days (mean 76-5 days). Mean fledging weight was not significantly greater than the average weight of breeding adults.
Fledging success was 36%. Many of the 39% of eggs which failed to hatch probably did so as a result of exposure to the sun's heat, following temporary desertion by adults which were themselves heat-stressed during incubation. Of the 41 % of chicks which died, most died young; many were probably killed by crabs Ocypode spp. Not more than 10% of all nest failures were due to nest site competition. A few chicks probably starved to death.
At the time of the study, both food and nesting sites were evidently in excess. A considerable increase in the size of the population will be possible before density-dependent control mechanisms begin to operate.  相似文献   

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