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Body mass and parental decisions in the Antarctic petrel Thalassoica antarctica : how long should the parents guard the chick?

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Abstract

In Procellariiformes, the parents guard the chick after it has attained homeothermy. This strategy may reduce the probability that a small chick is taken by predators, but is costly as only one parent can forage at a time. The decision to leave the chick may therefore be a compromise between the chick's vulnerability to predators, the body condition of the parent on the nest and whether the foraging parent returns in time. We studied how the number of days that parents guarded the chick was related to the body mass of the parent at the nest and the time the foraging parent spent at sea in the Antarctic petrel Thalassoica antarctica. We also examined how the body mass of the parent on the nest and the duration of the foraging trips influenced the chicks' body condition at the end of the guarding period. When the foraging parent did not return to the nest in time to relieve its mate, the number of days the parent on the nest kept guarding the chick was positively related to its body mass on arrival in the colony. The number of days the foraging parent spent at sea was positively related to the body mass of its mate, but those that returned in time had a shorter stay at sea relative to their mate's body mass than those that did not return before their mate had left. Apparently, both the body mass of the parent at the nest and the ability of the foraging parent to adjust its stay at sea to the mate's body mass is important for the number of days the parents guard the chick and also the chick's body condition at this point. The inability to return to the nest before the mate has left may be the result of needing a minimum amount of time at sea to find food, or because some parents having low foraging success and therefore prolong their stay at sea.

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Received: 10 October 1997 / Accepted after revision: 14 March 1998

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Tveraa, T., Sæther, BE., Aanes, R. et al. Body mass and parental decisions in the Antarctic petrel Thalassoica antarctica : how long should the parents guard the chick?. Behav Ecol Sociobiol 43, 73–79 (1998). https://doi.org/10.1007/s002650050468

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s002650050468

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