Effects of temperature and nest heat exposure on nestling growth, dehydration and survival in a Mediterranean hole-nesting passerine
Fecha
2014
Título de la revista
ISSN de la revista
Título del volumen
Editor
Wiley Online Library
Resumen
Variable environments impose constraints on adaptation by modifying selection gradients
unpredictably. Optimal bird development requires an adequate thermal range, outside
which temperatures can alter nestling physiology, condition and survival. We studied the
effect of temperature and nest heat exposure on the reproductive success of a population
of double-brooded Spotless Starlings Sturnus unicolor breeding in a nestbox colony in
central Spain with a marked intra-seasonal variation in temperature. We assessed
whether the effect of temperature differed between first and second broods, thus constraining
optimal nest-site choice. Ambient temperature changed greatly during the
chick-rearing period and had a strong influence on nestling mass and all body size
measures we recorded, although patterns of clutch size or nestling mortality were not
influenced. This effect differed between first and second broods: nestlings were found to
have longer wings and bills with increasing temperature in first broods, whereas the
effect was the opposite in second broods. Ambient temperature was not related to
nestling body mass or tarsus-length in first broods, but in second broods, nestlings were
lighter and had smaller tarsi with higher ambient temperatures. The exposure of
nestboxes to heat influenced nestling morphology: heat exposure index was negatively
related to nestling body mass and wing-length in second broods, but not in first broods.
Furthermore, there was a positive relationship between nest heat exposure and nestling
dehydration. Our results suggest that optimal nest choice is constrained by varying environmental
conditions in birds breeding over prolonged periods, and that there should be
selection for parents to switch from sun-exposed to sun-protected nest-sites as the season
progresses. However, nest-site availability and competition for sites are likely to impose
constraints on this choice.
Descripción
Palabras clave
Citación
Salaberría, C., Celis, P., López-Rull, I. and Gil, D. 2014. Effects of temperature and nest heat-exposure in nestling growth and survival in a Mediterranean hole-nesting passerine. Ibis 156: 265-275