N. Collar, S. Stuart (1985)
Threatened birds of Africa and related islands : the ICBP/IUCN Red data book, part I
J. Komdeur, F. Kraaijeveld-Smit, K. Kraaijeveld, P. Edelaar (1999)
Explicit experimental evidence for the role of mate guarding in minimizing loss of paternity in the Seychelles warblerProceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences, 266
(1995)
The population demography of the Seychelles warbler on Cousine Island, a saturating environment (MSc dissertation)
M. Andersson, C. Wiklund, Helen Rundgren (1980)
Parental defence of offspring: A model and an exampleAnimal Behaviour, 28
(1984)
Biostatistical analysis
(1997)
Timing of mate-guarding and reproduction in the Seychelles warbler on Cousine Island in 1996 (MSc dissertation)
J. Komdeur (1996)
Influence of age on reproductive performance in the Seychelles warblerBehavioral Ecology, 7
Y. Yom-Tov (1974)
The Effect of Food and Predation on Breeding Density and Success, Clutch Size and Laying Date of the Crow (Corvus corone L.)Journal of Animal Ecology, 43
(1997)
Timing of mate-guarding and reproduction in the Seychelles warbler on Cousine Island
R. Ricklefs (1969)
An analysis of nesting mortality in birds
J. Komdeur (1992)
Importance of habitat saturation and territory quality for evolution of cooperative breeding in the Seychelles warblerNature, 360
J. Komdeur (1994)
Conserving the seychelles warbler Acrocephalus sechellensis by translocation from Cousin Island to the islands of Aride and CousineBiological Conservation, 67
J. Komdeur (1996)
Seasonal Timing of Reproduction in a Tropical Bird, the Seychelles Warbler: A Field Experiment Using TranslocationJournal of Biological Rhythms, 11
(1991)
Nest-site selection and nesting success of cavitynesting birds in high elevation snow-melt forest
D. Lack (1969)
Ecological adaptations for breeding in birds
R. Trivers (1972)
Parental investment and sexual selection
T. Martin (1988)
Nest Placement: Implications for Selected Life-History Traits, with Special Reference to Clutch SizeThe American Naturalist, 132
P. Greig-Smith (1980)
Parental investment in nest defence by stonechats (Saxicola torquata)Animal Behaviour, 28
S. Stearns (1989)
Trade-offs in life-history evolutionFunctional Ecology, 3
R. Montgomerie, P. Weatherhead (1988)
Risks and Rewards of Nest Defence by Parent BirdsThe Quarterly Review of Biology, 63
S. Lima (1987)
Clutch Size in Birds: A Predation PerspectiveEcology, 68
T. Martin, Pingjun Li (1992)
Life History Traits of Open- vs. Cavity-Nesting BirdsEcology, 73
M. Rose (1983)
Theories of Life-History EvolutionIntegrative and Comparative Biology, 23
T. Martin (1992)
Interaction of Nest Predation and Food Limitation in Reproductive Strategies
A. Kappe (1998)
Detecting genetic variation : Application of molecular techniques in conservation biology
Paul Martin, P. Bateson (1986)
Measuring Behaviour: An Introductory Guide
(1991)
Cooperative breeding in the Seychelles warbler (PhD dissertation)
T. Martin (1987)
Food as a limit on breeding birds: a life-history perspectiveAnnual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics, 18
(1986)
Management plan of Cousin Island, Seychelles. Cambridge: International Council for Bird Preservation
(1972)
In: Sexual selection and the descent of man 1871-1971 (Campbell B, ed)
S. Nilsson (1986)
Evolution of hole-nesting in birds: on balancing selection pressuresThe Auk, 103
(1997)
How to use G*Power [WWW document
T. Case (1978)
On the Evolution and Adaptive Significance of Postnatal Growth Rates in the Terrestrial VertebratesThe Quarterly Review of Biology, 53
(1984)
Biostatistical analysis. Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice-Hall
A. Garrett, M. Lipsey (1989)
Design Sensitivity: Statistical Power for Experimental Research.The Statistician, 42
C. Lessells (1991)
The evolution of life histories
P. Arcese, James Smith (1988)
Effects of population density and supplemental food on reproduction in song sparrowsJournal of Animal Ecology, 57
P. Lachenbruch (1989)
Statistical Power Analysis for the Behavioral Sciences (2nd ed.)Journal of the American Statistical Association, 84
(1993)
Nest predation, nest sites and birds: new perspectives on old patterns. Bioscience 43:523–532
(1993)
Nest predation, nest sites and birds: new perspectives on old patterns
S. Nilsson (1984)
The evolution of nest-site selection among hole-nesting birds: the importance of nest predation and competitionOrnis scandinavica, 15
I. Mclean, K. Stewart, James Smith (1986)
Mobbing Behaviour, Nest Exposure, and Breeding Success in the American RobinBehaviour, 96
N. Collar, S. Stuart, Norman Arlott (1985)
Threatened birds of Africa and related islands
(1948)
The significance of clutch size . Part 3
P. Hayes, R. Robertson (1989)
The impact of male parental care on female Eastern Kingbird reproductive successThe Wilson Journal of Ornithology, 101
The fitness costs of egg loss for Seychelles warblers ( Acrocephalus sechellensis ) on Cousin Island are considerable because warblers have a single-egg clutch and no time to lay a successful replacement clutch. On the islands of Cousin and Cousine, with equal densities of Seychelles fodies ( Foudia sechellarum ), nearly 75% of artificial eggs placed in artificial nests were predated by fodies after 3 days. On Aride Island with no fodies present, loss of artificial eggs was not observed. Female warblers incubate the clutch, and male warblers guard the clutch when females are absent. Deterrence of fodies by male warblers is efficient: loss rate of eggs from unattended warbler nests was seven times as high as from attended nests, and the more nest guarding, the lower the egg loss and the higher the hatching success. Egg loss is independent of the amount of incubation by females. There is no trade-off between incubating and foraging by females. Nest guarding competes with foraging by males, and this trade-off has a more pronounced effect on egg loss when food availability is low. The transfer of breeding pairs from Cousin to either Cousine with egg-predating fodies or to Aride without fodies allowed us to experimentally investigate the presumed trade-off between nest guarding and foraging. On Cousine, individual males spent the same amount of time nest guarding and foraging as on Cousin, and egg loss was similar and inversely related to time spent nest guarding as on Cousin. Males that guarded their clutch on Cousin did not guard the clutch on Aride but allocated significantly more time to foraging and gained better body condition. Loss of warbler eggs on Aride was not observed. Time allocation to incubating and foraging by individual females before and after both translocations remained the same. Key words
Behavioral Ecology – Oxford University Press
Published: Nov 1, 1999
Read and print from thousands of top scholarly journals.
Already have an account? Log in
Bookmark this article. You can see your Bookmarks on your DeepDyve Library.
To save an article, log in first, or sign up for a DeepDyve account if you don’t already have one.
Copy and paste the desired citation format or use the link below to download a file formatted for EndNote
All DeepDyve websites use cookies to improve your online experience. They were placed on your computer when you launched this website. You can change your cookie settings through your browser.