Behavioural and hormonal stress responses during chick rearing do not predict brood desertion by female in a small Arctic seabird (original) (raw)

Behavioral and hormonal stress responses during chick rearing do not predict brood desertion by female in a small Arctic seabird

We examined behavioural and hormonal stress responses in a small seabird (little auk, Alle alle), which exhibits a transition from biparental to male-only care towards the end of the nesting period, in order to understand the mechanisms underlying this parental strategy. We hypothesized that the male staying with the chick should be less sensitive to stressors. As such the male might offer the offspring more efficient protection during the fledging period than the female. We tested this hypothesis by observing male and female behaviour in a neophobia test. We also measured the birds' baseline and stress-induced levels of corticosterone and prolactin using the standardized capture-and-restraint protocol. Both sexes respond rapidly to foreign objects, delaying the entry time to the nest with food, consuming the food load, and/or temporarily abandoning feeding. However, we did not find any differences between the sexes in the frequency of each behaviour or in the time of the first reaction to the experimental treatment. Level of both corticosterone and prolactin increased after the experimental treatment. However, we did not find sex differences in baseline and stress-induced hormone levels. The results indicate that the males are as much sensitive to the stress situation as the females. Thus, the pattern of male and female behavioural and hormonal responses to stress does not predict their behaviour at the final breeding stage.

Project Title: Effects of food stress on reproductive performance of seabirds at Pribilof and Bogoslof Islands

1990. Flexible time budgets in breeding common murres: buffers against variable prey abundance. Stud. Avian Biol., 14:71-83. Decker, MB., Hunt G.L., Byrd G.V. 1995. The relationships among sea-surface temperature, the abundance of juvenile walley pollock (Theragra chalcogramma) and the reproductive performance and diets of seabirds at the Pribiof Islands, southeastern Bering Sea. Can. Spec. Publ. Fish. Aquat Sci 121:425-437. Hunt, G.L., Kitaysky A.S., Decker M.B., Dragoo D.E., and Springer A.M. Changes in the distribution and size of juvenile pollock, Theragra chalcogramma, as indicated by seabird diets at the Pribilof Islands, and by bottom trawl surveys in the eastern . benefits and costs of increased levels of corticosterone in seabird chicks. Horm. Behav., in press. Kitaysky A.S., J.C. Wingfield, and J.F. Piatt. 1999a. Dynamics of food availability, body condition and physiological stress response in breeding kittiwakes. Functional Ecology, Vol. 13(5):577-584. Kitaysky A.S., G.L. Hunt, E.N. Flint, M.A. Rubega, and M.B. Decker. 2000. Resource allocation in breeding seabirds: responses to fluctuations in their food supply. Mar. Ecol. Prog. Ser. 206:283-296. Kitaysky A.S., J.C. Wingfield, and J.F. Piatt. 2001. Corticosterone facilitates begging and affects resource allocation in the Black-legged Kittiwake. Behavioral Ecology. 12:619-625. Kitaysky A.S., J.F. Piatt, J.C. Wingfield, and M. Romano. 1999b. The adrenocortical stressresponse of Black-legged Kittiwake chicks in relation to dietary restriction. J. Comp. Physiol. B, 169:303-310. Kitaysky A.S., Kitaiskaia E.V., J.C. Wingfield, and J.F. Piatt. 2001b. Dietary restriction causes chronic elevation of corticosterone and enhances stress response in red-

Physiological and fitness correlates of experimentally altered hatching asynchrony magnitude in chicks of a wild seabird

General and Comparative Endocrinology, 2014

Nest-bound chicks depend entirely on their parents for food, often leading to high sibling competition. Asynchronous hatching, resulting from the onset of incubation before clutch completion, facilitates the establishment of within-nest hierarchy, with younger chicks being subject to lower feeding and growth rates. Because social and nutritional stresses affect baseline stress hormone levels in birds, younger chicks are expected to have higher levels of corticosterone than their siblings. As previous studies showed that hatching asynchrony magnitude influences the course of sibling competition, it should also affect baseline corticosterone. We measured baseline corticosterone at age 5 days in nestling black-legged kittiwakes (Rissa tridactyla) in 3 types of experimental broods: synchronous, asynchronous, and highly asynchronous. Sexual dimorphism takes place during chick-rearing and might also influence baseline corticosterone, we thus included chick sex in our analyses and also monitored chick growth and survival. Baseline corticosterone did not differ among A-chicks, but was higher in B-chicks from highly asynchronous broods compared with the other brood types, in line with the presumed increase in nutritional stress. In asynchronous broods, A-chicks had higher baseline corticosterone than their siblings, contrary to our expectations. We interpret that result as a cost of dominance among A-chicks. In line with previous studies, mass gain was negatively correlated with baseline corticosterone levels. We found that baseline corticosterone predicted survival in a sex-specific way. Regardless of hatching rank, males with higher baseline corticosterone suffered higher mortality, suggesting that males were more sensitive to high level of stress, independently of its cause.