Parental food provisioning and nestling growth under Philornis downsi parasitism in the Galapagos Green Warbler-Finch, classified as 'vulnerable' by the IUCN.

IF 1.3 4区 生物学 Q2 Agricultural and Biological Sciences Journal of Ornithology Pub Date : 2023-01-01 Epub Date: 2023-02-18 DOI:10.1007/s10336-023-02049-9
Courtney L Pike, Barbara Kofler, Heinz Richner, Sabine Tebbich
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Abstract

In the Galapagos Islands, many endemic landbird populations are declining due to habitat degradation, food availability, introduced species and other factors. Given nestlings typically lack efficient defense mechanisms against parasites, hematophagous ectoparasites such as the larvae of the introduced Avian Vampire Fly, Philornis downsi, can impose high brood mortality and cause threatening population declines in Darwin finches and other landbirds. Here, we assess whether the food compensation hypothesis (i.e., the parents' potential to compensate for deleterious parasite effects via increased food provisioning) applies to the Green Warbler-Finch. We differentiated nests with low or high infestation levels by P. downsi and quantified food provisioning rates of male and female parents, time females spent brooding nestlings, and nestling growth. Male provisioning rates, total provisioning rates and female brooding time did not significantly vary in relation to infestation levels, nor by the number of nestlings. Opposed to the predictions of the food compensation hypothesis, females showed significantly reduced provisioning rates at high infestation levels. Nestling body mass was significantly lower and there was a reduction of skeletal growth, although not significantly, in highly infested nests. The females' response to high infestation may be due to parasites directly attacking and weakening brooding females, or else that females actively reduce current reproductive effort in favor of future reproduction. This life-history trade-off may be typical for Darwin finches and many tropical birds with long lifespans and therefore high residual reproductive value. Conservation strategies may not build on the potential for parental food compensation by this species.

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加拉帕戈斯绿莺Finch在Philornis desi寄生下的父母食物供应和巢穴生长,被国际自然保护联盟列为“易危”。
在加拉帕戈斯群岛,由于栖息地退化、食物供应、引入物种和其他因素,许多地方性陆生鸟类的数量正在下降。鉴于雏鸟通常缺乏对寄生虫的有效防御机制,吸血的体外寄生虫,如引入的鸟类吸血蝇Philornis downi的幼虫,可能会导致高孵化死亡率,并导致达尔文雀和其他陆生鸟类的数量下降。在这里,我们评估了食物补偿假说(即父母通过增加食物供应来补偿有害寄生虫影响的潜力)是否适用于绿莺芬奇。我们通过P.desi区分了侵扰程度低或高的巢穴,并量化了雄性和雌性父母的食物供应率、雌性孵化雏鸟的时间以及雏鸟的生长。雄性供应率、总供应率和雌性育婴时间与虫害水平和雏鸟数量没有显著差异。与食物补偿假说的预测相反,雌性在高虫害水平下的供应率显著降低。巢体质量明显较低,在高度感染的巢中,骨骼生长减少,尽管没有显著减少。雌性对高感染的反应可能是由于寄生虫直接攻击和削弱了产卵的雌性,或者雌性主动减少当前的繁殖努力以利于未来的繁殖。这种生活史上的权衡可能是达尔文雀和许多寿命长的热带鸟类的典型情况,因此具有很高的剩余繁殖价值。保护策略可能不会建立在该物种对亲本食物补偿的潜力之上。
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来源期刊
Journal of Ornithology
Journal of Ornithology 生物-鸟类学
自引率
7.70%
发文量
0
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Ornithology (formerly Journal für Ornithologie) is the official journal of the German Ornithologists'' Society (http://www.do-g.de/ ) and has been the Society´s periodical since 1853, making it the oldest still existing ornithological journal worldwide.
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