Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 2 de 2
Filtrar
Mais filtros











Base de dados
Intervalo de ano de publicação
1.
Ecol Evol ; 13(6): e10138, 2023 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37304365

RESUMO

Foraging outcomes dictate the nutritional resources available to an organism and may vary with intrinsic factors, like age. Thus, understanding how age affects foraging performance, alone or in interaction with extrinsic factors (like environmental quality), improves our understanding of aging processes in the wild. We examined how foraging traits, measured across five breeding seasons, change with age, environmental variation, and their interaction in Nazca boobies (Sula granti), a pelagic seabird in Galápagos. We evaluated the hypotheses that (1) foraging performance is better in middle-aged birds than in young ones, and that (2) foraging performance is better in middle-aged birds than in old ones. Furthermore, favorable environmental conditions will either (3) attenuate age differences in foraging performance (by relieving constraints on young, inexperienced and old, senescent age classes), or (4) accentuate age differences (if middle-aged birds can exploit abundant resources better than other age classes can). Incubating birds tagged with GPS loggers (N = 815) provided data on foraging performance (e.g., total distance traveled, mass gained) to evaluate interactions between age and environmental variation (e.g., sea surface temperature). Poor environmental conditions associated with the cool phase of the El Niño-Southern Oscillation increased foraging effort, including foraging distance and duration, for example. Across age classes, foraging boobies responded similarly to environmental variation except for female mass gain rate: age-related declines in mass gain rate were reduced under favorable environmental conditions. Birds of different ages also searched in somewhat distinct areas in the poor conditions of 2016, but not in other years. In several foraging traits, including foraging duration and distance, female boobies showed predicted early-life improvement and late-life decline, following the established pattern for reproductive traits in this species. Thus, deficits in resource acquisition (this study) may contribute to the poor survival and reproductive outcomes previously observed in old Nazca boobies, particularly in females.


Los resultados del forrajeo determinan los recursos nutricionales disponibles de un organismo, los cuales pueden variar por factores intrínsecos, como la edad. Por lo tanto, el entendimiento de cómo la edad afecta el rendimiento de forrajeo, sola o en interacción con factores extrínsecos (como la calidad ambiental), mejora nuestro entendimiento de los procesos del envejecimiento en la naturaleza. Nosotros examinamos como las características de forrajeo, a lo largo de cinco temporadas reproductivas, cambian con la edad, la variabilidad ambiental y sus interacciones en el Piquero de Nazca (Sula granti), un ave marina pelágica en las Islas Galápagos. Evaluamos las hipótesis que (1) el desempeño de búsqueda de alimentación es mejor en aves adultas que en las jóvenes, y que (2) este desempeño es mejor en aves adultas que en las viejas. Además, las condiciones ambientales favorables (3) atenuaran las diferencias de edades en el rendimiento de forrajeo (aliviando las restricciones en los jóvenes, inexpertos, y viejos), o (4) acentuaran las diferencias de edad (sí los adultos pueden explotar recursos abundantes de mejor forma que otros grupos etarios). Colocamos dispositivos GPS en aves incubadoras (N = 815), para colectar datos sobre el rendimiento del forrajeo (p. ej. distancia total de viaje, incremento de peso) para evaluar las interacciones entre edad y la variación ambiental (p. ej. temperatura superficial del mar). Las condiciones ambientales adversas relacionadas a la fase fría de El Niño Oscilación del Sur incrementaron el esfuerzo de forrajeo (la distancia de forrajeo y su duración, por ejemplo). En todos los grupos etarios, los piqueros respondieron de forma similar a la variación ambiental, excepto la tasa de ganancia de peso de las hembras. Las reducciones relacionadas a la edad en la tasa de ganancia de peso fueron menores durante condiciones ambientales favorables. Las aves de diferentes grupos etarios buscaron alimento en zonas levemente diferentes durante las condiciones adversas de 2016, pero no en otros años. En varias características de forrajeo, incluyendo la duración y la distancia, las hembras mostraron un esperado mejoramiento en los primeros años y un declive en su vida tardía, mostrando el patrón establecido en rasgos reproductivos en esta especie. Por lo tanto, el déficit en la adquisición de recursos (este estudio), puede contribuir a la reducida supervivencia y los resultados reproductivos previamente observados en piqueros de Nazca viejos, especialmente en las hembras.

2.
Curr Biol ; 33(6): 1179-1184.e3, 2023 03 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36827987

RESUMO

Storms can cause widespread seabird stranding and wrecking,1,2,3,4,5 yet little is known about the maximum wind speeds that birds are able to tolerate or the conditions they avoid. We analyzed >300,000 h of tracking data from 18 seabird species, including flapping and soaring fliers, to assess how flight morphology affects wind selectivity, both at fine scales (hourly movement steps) and across the breeding season. We found no general preference or avoidance of particular wind speeds within foraging tracks. This suggests seabird flight morphology is adapted to a "wind niche," with higher wing loading being selected in windier environments. In support of this, wing loading was positively related to the median wind speeds on the breeding grounds, as well as the maximum wind speeds in which birds flew. Yet globally, the highest wind speeds occur in the tropics (in association with tropical cyclones) where birds are morphologically adapted to low median wind speeds. Tropical species must therefore show behavioral responses to extreme winds, including long-range avoidance of wind speeds that can be twice their operable maxima. By contrast, Procellariiformes flew in almost all wind speeds they encountered at a seasonal scale. Despite this, we describe a small number of cases where albatrosses avoided strong winds at close range, including by flying into the eye of the storm. Extreme winds appear to pose context-dependent risks to seabirds, and more information is needed on the factors that determine the hierarchy of risk, given the impact of global change on storm intensity.6,7.


Assuntos
Voo Animal , Vento , Animais , Voo Animal/fisiologia , Aves/fisiologia , Adaptação Fisiológica , Comportamento Alimentar/fisiologia
SELEÇÃO DE REFERÊNCIAS
DETALHE DA PESQUISA