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Influence of Food Limitation on Reproductive Performance of Burrowing Owls

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Title Influence of Food Limitation on Reproductive Performance of Burrowing Owls
Names Haley, Katherin L. (creator)
Rosenberg, Daniel K. (creator)
Date Issued 2013-12 (iso8601)
Note This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by the Raptor Research Foundation, Inc. and can be found at: http://www.raptorresearchfoundation.org/publications/journal-of-raptor-research.
Abstract Reproductive strategies of birds are shaped by patterns of food supply, yet empirical evidence of
the consequences and mechanisms of food limitation on reproductive performance is inconsistent, probably
due to variable responses from species of differing life-history strategies. We tested the hypothesis that food
supplementation would increase reproductive rates of a nonmigratory population of Burrowing Owls (Athene
cunicularia) via direct and indirect pathways. We predicted increasing food availability would directly increase
growth and survival of the youngest nestlings and would indirectly decrease predation rates of eggs and
nestlings by increasing nest attendance. We experimentally supplemented food from clutch completion
through brood-rearing during two breeding seasons (April–July 1999 and 2000) in the agricultural matrix
of the Imperial Valley, in southeastern California. In both years, hatching success (hatchlings/egg laid) was
similar between supplemented and non-supplemented nests, but the proportion that survived to 28 d was
higher in food-supplemented nests. Growth rates and survival rates of last-hatched young were lower in non-supplemented
than supplemented nests in only one year of the study. A greater proportion of hatchling
deaths were attributed to starvation in non-supplemented nests. Nest attendance was greater in supplemented
nests although low predation for supplemented and non-supplemented nests resulted in no effects on
reproductive success. Our results were consistent with the brood-reduction hypothesis that predicts that food
supplementation would result in a greater number of fledglings by increasing survival of the youngest
nestlings through increased growth rates when hatching asynchrony exists and food is limited.
Genre Article
Topic Burrowing Owl
Identifier Haley, K. L., & Rosenberg, D. K. (2013). Influence of Food Limitation on Reproductive Performance of Burrowing Owls. Journal of Raptor Research, 47(4), 365-376. doi:10.3356/JRR-12-00022.1

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