Sternal Punctures in Common Loons (Gavia immer): Gender and Territorial Aggression

IF 0.7 4区 生物学 Q3 ORNITHOLOGY Waterbirds Pub Date : 2022-11-11 DOI:10.1675/063.045.0109
A. Higgins, M. Hartwick, M. Pokras
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Abstract. Aggression between adult Common Loons (Gavia immer) occurs frequently during the breeding season. In the past, it was suspected that most instances of intraspecific aggression took place between adult males. However, recent reports from the field suggest that female adult loons also participate in these battles. Postmortem investigation has shown that the damage incurred during these battles can range from incidental to fatal injuries. Sternal punctures are the most lasting evidence of this trauma and can serve as long-term records. Nearly half (46%, n = 268/574) of the loons received at Tufts Wildlife Clinic for postmortem from 2007 to 2015 were found to have sternal punctures. We conducted a focused analysis of the sternal punctures of 102 of these adult loons (49 female and 53 male) and found no significant difference in the number, distribution, or severity of sternal punctures between male and female loons. This suggests that the frequency and intensity of aggressive physical contests are remarkably similar between sexes and that there is no gender difference in the severity of these battles. Female Common Loons participate in lethal combats as often as their male counterparts. These findings provide an opportunity to better understand and study the biological or behavioral drivers of this aggression that is prevalent among both male and female Common Loons.
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普通胸骨穿刺:性别和领土侵略
摘要在繁殖季节,成虫间的攻击经常发生。过去,人们怀疑大多数种内攻击发生在成年雄性之间。然而,最近来自该领域的报告表明,雌性成年懒虫也参与了这些战斗。事后调查表明,在这些战斗中造成的伤害可能是意外伤害,也可能是致命伤害。胸骨穿刺是这种创伤最持久的证据,可以作为长期记录。2007年至2015年,在塔夫茨野生动物诊所接受尸检的近一半(46%,n = 268/574)的鸽子被发现有胸骨刺穿。我们对102例成年潜鸟(49例女性和53例男性)的胸骨穿刺进行了重点分析,发现男性和女性潜鸟在胸骨穿刺的数量、分布或严重程度上没有显著差异。这表明,攻击性身体对抗的频率和强度在两性之间非常相似,而且这种对抗的严重程度没有性别差异。雌性普通潜鸟和雄性潜鸟一样经常参与致命的战斗。这些发现为更好地理解和研究这种攻击行为的生物学或行为驱动因素提供了一个机会,这种攻击行为在雄性和雌性普通潜鸟中都很普遍。
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来源期刊
Waterbirds
Waterbirds 生物-鸟类学
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Waterbirds is an international scientific journal of the Waterbird Society. The journal is published four times a year (March, June, September and December) and specializes in the biology, abundance, ecology, management and conservation of all waterbird species living in marine, estuarine and freshwater habitats. Waterbirds welcomes submission of scientific articles and notes containing the results of original studies worldwide, unsolicited critical commentary and reviews of appropriate topics.
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