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BIOLOGY AND BEHAVIOUR OF FRIGATEBIRDS FREGATA SPP. ON ALDABRA ATOLL
Authors:A. W. Diamond
Affiliation:University of Aberdeen, Culterty Field Station, Newburgh, Ellon, Aberdeenshire
Abstract:Both species nested in mixed colonies in mangrove trees. The tops of trees were usually occupied exclusively by minor and the lower parts by ariel, but most nests of both species were in the intermediate parts of the canopy. The main laying season for both species was July to January. A census showed about 27 000 individuals present at the height of the season (1500 breeding pairs of minor, 5350 of ariel). Seasonal variation in numbers could be accounted for almost entirely by the changes in breeding activity of a resident population. Young of both species were fed at or near the nest-site for at least four months after fledging. A recovery near Bombay of a wing-tagged immature ariel shows that this species, at least, undergoes a post-fledging dispersal; it is suggested that young minor either do not disperse, or do so later than ariel. Food samples collected from chicks showed no overall difference between the species, but a seasonal analysis showed that ariel took more squid than minor in the wet season, and in the dry season the two species took different proportions of the two commonest species of flying-fish. Chicks of ariel received smaller meals than minor chicks in the wet season, but similar-sized meals in the dry season; ariel chicks grew more slowly than minor chicks. It is suggested that the timing of the breeding season is related to the need for adults to build up fat reserves to carry them through the courtship, nest-building and laying periods, when they are tied to the colony and so have little opportunity to feed. The evidence for non-annual breeding in frigatebirds is discussed. It is concluded that while successful breeders must breed at intervals of more than 12 months, they could theoretically nest in two successive seasons and that, since breeding success is low, most individuals probably do so. Existing knowledge of the biology of four of the five recognized species of frigatebirds is summarized, and shows that the family is at least as uniform as the tropicbirds and much more so than other Pelicaniformes.
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