TY - JOUR
T1 - Temperature, wind, vegetation, and roads influence incubation patterns of Greater Prairie-Chickens (Tympanuchus cupido pinnatus) in the Nebraska Sandhills, USA
AU - Hoppe, Ian R.
AU - Harrison, Jocelyn O.
AU - Raynor, Edward J.
AU - Brown, Mary Bomberger
AU - Powell, Larkin A.
AU - Tyre, Andrew J.
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank D. Bauer, P. Bauer, N. Bieber, M. Gonnerman, A.J. Johnson, E. Kermath, J.J. Lusk, R. Plettner, J. Mather, T. Montgomery, L. O’Hare, L. Sanders, E. Shogren, T. Trump, N. Turner, W.L. Vodehnal, C. Walfnofer, J.A. Smith, and C. Whalen for assistance. We thank the private landowners in our study area and the Nebraska Public Power District for providing land access. We also thank two anonymous reviewers for constructive comments that improved the manuscript. Funding was provided by Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration Project W-99-R, the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program (DGE-1041000), and Pheasants Forever. None of these funding agencies had input into the content of this manuscript or required approval of the manuscript before submission or publication.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019, Canadian Science Publishing. All rights reserved.
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - Avian incubation involves behavioral decisions that must balance trade-offs between the incubating bird’s survival and current and future reproductive success. We evaluated variation in incubation off-bout duration and frequency among Greater Prairie-Chickens (Tympanuchus cupido pinnatus (Brewster, 1885)) in the Nebraska Sandhills, USA. Greater Prairie-Chicken life history favors incubation behaviors that prioritize success of the current breeding attempt over adult survival. Previous observations suggest incubating females make these behavioral decisions based on ambient temperature conditions, their own body condition, and predation risk. We monitored nest attendance by females at 30 Greater Prairie-Chicken nests to identify proximate cues used to make behavioral decisions regarding incubation. We recorded 930 incubation off-bouts. Females took 1.9 ± 0.7 off-bouts/day (mean ± SD), each with a mean (±SD) duration of 43.3 ± 24.1 min. Off-bouts were shorter in duration at higher wind speeds, at lower ambient temperatures, at nests with less cover, and at nests closer to roads. Females were most likely to leave the nest during mid-morning and evening, as are most gallinaceous birds, and incubation off-bouts became less frequent later in the season. We did not observe differences in incubation behavior between nests that failed and those that successfully hatched one or more chicks.
AB - Avian incubation involves behavioral decisions that must balance trade-offs between the incubating bird’s survival and current and future reproductive success. We evaluated variation in incubation off-bout duration and frequency among Greater Prairie-Chickens (Tympanuchus cupido pinnatus (Brewster, 1885)) in the Nebraska Sandhills, USA. Greater Prairie-Chicken life history favors incubation behaviors that prioritize success of the current breeding attempt over adult survival. Previous observations suggest incubating females make these behavioral decisions based on ambient temperature conditions, their own body condition, and predation risk. We monitored nest attendance by females at 30 Greater Prairie-Chicken nests to identify proximate cues used to make behavioral decisions regarding incubation. We recorded 930 incubation off-bouts. Females took 1.9 ± 0.7 off-bouts/day (mean ± SD), each with a mean (±SD) duration of 43.3 ± 24.1 min. Off-bouts were shorter in duration at higher wind speeds, at lower ambient temperatures, at nests with less cover, and at nests closer to roads. Females were most likely to leave the nest during mid-morning and evening, as are most gallinaceous birds, and incubation off-bouts became less frequent later in the season. We did not observe differences in incubation behavior between nests that failed and those that successfully hatched one or more chicks.
KW - Greater prairie-chicken
KW - Incubation behavior
KW - Mixed-effects models
KW - Nest attendance
KW - Tympanuchus cupido pinnatus
KW - ibutton temperature loggers
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U2 - 10.1139/cjz-2018-0130
DO - 10.1139/cjz-2018-0130
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85061495060
SN - 0008-4301
VL - 97
SP - 91
EP - 99
JO - Canadian Journal of Zoology
JF - Canadian Journal of Zoology
IS - 2
ER -