Incidence of eccentric molt in first‐year Wrentits increases with fledge date |
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Authors: | Megan L. Elrod Nathaniel E. Seavy Renée L. Cormier Thomas Gardali |
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Affiliation: | PRBO Conservation Science, 3820 Cypress Drive #11, Petaluma, California 94954, USA |
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Abstract: | ABSTRACT In some passerines, the extent of preformative molt varies among individuals. Wrentits (Chamaea fasciata) undergo either a complete preformative molt or an eccentric (i.e., incomplete) preformative molt where some juvenile remiges are retained through the first cycle. Factors that influence the incidence and extent of molt are largely unknown. Using a 10‐yr data set from the Palomarin Field Station in central coastal California, we quantified the incidence of eccentric molt and the degree to which variation in the incidence was associated with fledging date and weather. From 1999 to 2009, 159 Wrentits were banded as nestlings and subsequently recaptured. Of these, 21% of first‐year Wrentits underwent eccentric molt. We used logistic regression and an information theoretic approach to compare models with fledging date, weather (annual precipitation and breeding‐season temperature), and a random effect of year as predictors of the incidence of eccentric molt. Our top model included a random intercept term for year and a fixed effect for the effect of fledging date; birds that fledged later in the season were more likely to undergo eccentric molt. Although the proportion of individuals that underwent eccentric molt varied among years, models with breeding‐season temperature and annual rainfall showed little to no support. Our results suggest that the incidence of eccentric molt is more strongly associated with fledging date than with annual variation in weather. The absence of a correlation with weather suggests that weather does not impose an energetic constraint on molt or, if it does, that birds are constrained in their ability to respond to changes in weather by adjusting the extent of their preformative molt. Other factors, such as nestling condition, may provide alternative explanations for year‐to‐year variability in the incidence of eccentric molt. |
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Keywords: | Chamaea fasciata eccentric molt fledge date molt Palomarin preformative molt Wrentit |
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