184 results on '"Sula nebouxii"'
Search Results
2. Isolation and characterization of microsatellite loci from blue-footed boobies (Sula nebouxii)
- Author
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Faircloth, Brant C., Ramos, Alejandra, Drummond, Hugh, and Gowaty, Patricia Adair
- Subjects
Life Sciences ,Evolutionary Biology ,Animal Anatomy / Morphology / Histology ,Plant Sciences ,Conservation Biology/Ecology ,Microsatellites ,SSRs ,Blue-footed booby ,Sula nebouxii ,Sulidae - Abstract
Blue-footed boobies (Sula nebouxii) are socially monogamous, colonial seabirds exhibiting intra-specific nest parasitism and extra-pair copulations. Prior DNA fingerprinting assays failed to detect extra-pair offspring in the nests of congeners, and the rate of intra-specific nest parasitism has not been estimated using molecular techniques. We describe the development and characterization of 11 microsatellite DNA loci, tested using 31 individuals collected on Isla Isabel, Nayarit, México. The number of alleles per locus ranged from three to 22, averaging seven; total exclusionary power of the microsatellite panel was 0.99; no loci deviated from Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium; and we did not detect linkage disequilibrium following Bonferroni correction. This microsatellite panel will facilitate future studies of nest parasitism and extra-pair paternity in blue-footed boobies.
- Published
- 2009
3. Prevalence of Haemoproteus sp. in Galápagos blue-footed boobies: effects on health and reproduction.
- Author
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LEE-CRUZ, LARISA, CUNNINGHAM, ANDREW A., MARTÍNEZ, PAMELA, CRUZ, MARILYN, GOODMAN, SIMON J., and HAMER, KEITH C.
- Subjects
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BLOOD parasites , *BLUE-footed booby , *INTRODUCED species , *PLASMODIUM , *BIRD diseases , *BREEDING , *PARASITISM - Abstract
Populations of blue-footed boobies in the Galápagos Islands have declined by at least 50% compared with numbers recorded during the 1960s. Recently, concern has been expressed about potential adverse effects of introduced blood parasites; in particular, malarial parasites (i.e. Plasmodium sp.), which are frequently pathogenic and can cause mortality and morbidity in birds, and blood parasites of the genus Haemoproteus, which can reduce fitness. We screened blue-footed boobies at six breeding colonies within Galápagos for both genera of parasite. At two sites, we also investigated whether there was any relationship between infection status and physiological condition or breeding success. We found a high prevalence of Haemoproteus spp. in adults and chicks using PCR, although none was found on blood smears. We found no evidence of Plasmodium. Effects of parasitism on the condition of birds were limited. Also, there was no evidence that infection with Haemoproteus adversely affected breeding success or chick growth. Our results suggest that poor success of breeding birds was not strongly associated with Haemoproteus infection. However, regular colony monitoring and examination of dead birds are necessary to assess whether acute Haemoproteus infection might be responsible for some mortality, particularly of chicks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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4. Variation in parental rearing expenditure triggers short-term physiological effects on offspring in a long-lived seabird.
- Author
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González‐Medina, Erick, Castillo‐Guerrero, José Alfredo, Santiago‐Quesada, Francisco, Villegas, Auxiliadora, Masero, José A., Sánchez‐Guzmán, Juan M., Fernández, Guillermo, and Wanless, Ross
- Subjects
PARENTAL behavior in animals ,SEA birds ,SEA bird chicks ,BLUE-footed booby ,ALKALINE phosphatase ,BIRDS - Abstract
Parental care in long-lived bird species involves a trade-off between the benefits of increasing the effort expended on current offspring and the costs that this represents for future reproductive output. Under regimes of high environmental variability, long-lived seabirds can adjust their breeding effort to buffer the negative effects of this variability on their offspring. However, the potential impacts of variation in breeding effort on offspring physiology in the short term and on longer-term survival are poorly understood. In this study, we manipulated brood age through a cross-fostering experiment to assess whether increasing or decreasing parental reproductive expenditure led to costs in Blue-footed Booby Sula nebouxii chicks. Specifically, we tested the consequences of altered parental reproductive expenditure on the offspring's physiological condition (plasma metabolites, heterophil to lymphocyte ratio (H/L) and body condition index ( BCI)) and survival. Offspring from broods in which parental investment was experimentally increased showed a lower BCI and lower alkaline phosphatase levels and higher H/L ratios than controls. Conversely, offspring showed the opposite pattern when reproductive expenditure was experimentally decreased. We observed no effects of manipulation of parental investment on triglyceride levels or on survival rates. Although our findings suggest that Blue-footed Booby parents have the ability to adjust their breeding effort according to the demands of their offspring, parental effort could influence the effect of hatching order by suppressing the aggressive tendency of the senior chick. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Telomere lengths correlate with fitness but assortative mating by telomeres confers no benefit to fledgling recruitment
- Author
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Hugh Drummond, Alexander S. Kitaysky, and Rebecca C. Young
- Subjects
Male ,0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Adaptive value ,Offspring ,Science ,Ecophysiology ,Longevity ,Breeding ,Booby ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Article ,Birds ,03 medical and health sciences ,Animals ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Reproductive success ,Reproduction ,Assortative mating ,Telomere Homeostasis ,biology.organism_classification ,Telomere ,030104 developmental biology ,Evolutionary biology ,Breeding pair ,Medicine ,Female ,Sula nebouxii ,Molecular ecology - Abstract
Assortative mating by telomere lengths has been observed in several bird species, and in some cases may increase fitness of individuals. Here we examined the relationship between telomere lengths of Blue-footed Booby (Sula nebouxii) mates, long-lived colonial seabirds with high annual divorce rates. We tested the hypothesis that interactions between maternal and paternal telomere lengths affect offspring and parental survival. We found that relative telomere lengths (RTL) were strongly positively correlated between members of a breeding pair. In addition, RTL of both parents interacted to predict fledgling recruitment, although fledglings with two very long-RTL parents performed only averagely. Telomere lengths also predicted adult survival: birds with long telomeres were more likely to survive, but birds whose mate had long telomeres were less likely to survive. Thus, having long telomeres benefits survival, while choosing a mate with long telomeres benefits reproductive output while penalizing survival. These patterns demonstrate that while a breeder's RTL predicts offspring quality, assortative mating by RTL does not enhance fitness, and a trade-off between different components of fitness may govern patterns of assortative mating by telomere length. They also illustrate how testing the adaptive value of only one parent’s telomere length on either survival or reproductive success alone may provide equivocal results.
- Published
- 2021
6. Habitat structure and colony structure constrain extrapair paternity in a colonial bird.
- Author
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Ramos, Alejandra G., Nunziata, Schyler O., Lance, Stacey L., Rodríguez, Cristina, Faircloth, Brant C., Gowaty, Patricia Adair, and Drummond, Hugh
- Subjects
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PATERNITY , *COLONIAL birds , *BIRD breeders , *PREDATION , *HABITATS , *BLUE-footed booby - Abstract
Individual variation in sexual fidelity and extrapair paternity (EPP) is widely attributed to environmental heterogeneity, but the only variables known to be influential are food abundance and density of conspecific breeders (potential extrapair partners). Habitat structure is thought to impact EPP but is rarely measured and, when considered, is usually confounded with food abundance and predation pressure. To sidestep these confounds, we tested whether EPP is associated with habitat structure variables and with local conspecific density in a species whose nesting habitat is not used for feeding and lacks predators. In a blue-footed booby, Sula nebouxii , colony, the probability of EPP in a female's nest was highest in parts of the study plot where there were few obstacles to locomotion, and was quadratically related to local density of sexually active males, even though local males did not sire the EP chicks. The probability of a male breeder siring EP (extrapair) chicks elsewhere was quadratically related to local density of sexually active males around his nest. From these patterns we infer that both sexes may foray for EP interactions, that males and females nesting at intermediate density are most likely to be accessed by forayers, and that obstacles in the vicinity of a female's nest constrain access of foraying males. To our knowledge, this is the first demonstration that individual variation in EPP is associated with habitat structure in the absence of confounding variation in food availability, predation pressure or breeder quality, and the first evidence that EPP opportunities of female and male breeders are reduced by high density of conspecific breeders above a particular threshold. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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7. Temporal and sex-based variation in organochlorine pesticide levels in the blue-footed booby in two coastal colonies of Sinaloa, Mexico
- Author
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Juan P Ceyca-Contreras, José Alfredo Castillo-Guerrero, Alberto Piña-Ortiz, C.E. Covantes-Rosales, and Miguel Betancourt-Lozano
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0106 biological sciences ,Sentinel species ,Zoology ,010501 environmental sciences ,Aquatic Science ,Biology ,Booby ,Oceanography ,01 natural sciences ,Predation ,Birds ,Seasonal breeder ,Hydrocarbons, Chlorinated ,Animals ,Humans ,Pesticides ,Mexico ,Ecosystem ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Ecosystem health ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,Organochlorine pesticide ,Pelagic zone ,biology.organism_classification ,Pollution ,Sula nebouxii ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
The temporal, inter-site, and sex-based variation of 19 organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) in blood plasma samples collected from blue-footed boobies of two islands in Sinaloa, Mexico, was evaluated. The effect of OCPs was evaluated with the heterophil/lymphocyte ratio, micronucleated erythrocyte frequency, and scaled mass index. The OCP-group levels decreased as the breeding season progressed, and interannual (but not inter-colony) differences were detected. Intra-annual variation in OCP levels seemed to reflect run-off inputs, although other environmental processes may better explain the variation between years. Sex-based differences in OCP levels were likely related to ecological and physiological processes linked to breeding (e.g., egg-laying and use of lipid reserves). No correlations between OCP-group levels and biomarkers were detected. Small pelagic fishes are the main prey sources of blue-footed boobies and the targets of regional industrial fisheries, and thus blue-footed booby OCP levels could reflect ecosystem health and indicate potential risks for human consumers.
- Published
- 2020
8. Mate selection based on labile traits affects short-term fitness in a long-lived seabird
- Author
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Erick González-Medina, José A. Masero, José Alfredo Castillo-Guerrero, and Guillermo Fernández
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Male ,Offspring ,Foraging ,Zoology ,Booby ,Breeding ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Birds ,biology.animal ,Animals ,Behaviour ,General Environmental Science ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,biology ,Reproductive success ,Reproduction ,Assortative mating ,General Medicine ,Mating Preference, Animal ,biology.organism_classification ,Phenotype ,Mate choice ,Female ,Seabird ,Sula nebouxii ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences - Abstract
In long-lived monogamous social species, partner compatibility can play a crucial role in reproductive success. We evaluated assortative mating based on body condition (plasma triglyceride concentration), diet (δ 15 N), and foraging habitat (δ 13 C) in the blue-footed booby Sula nebouxii , a long-lived monogamous seabird. We investigated the effects of assortative mating (sum of triglycerides in a pair) and asymmetry within pairs (residuals from regression of female–male triglycerides) on reproductive performance and offspring growth (alkaline phosphatase, ALP). We found that strong assortative mating determined by body condition and diet seemed to be related to a signalling mechanism (nutritional state). This mating pattern had a substantial effect on the breeding parameters and influenced offspring ALP. Within-pair asymmetry did not influence any reproductive parameters, but the ALP of offspring was related to the within-pair relative female condition. Overall, our results indicate that individuals seek the best possible match to maximize their breeding investment and/or individuals are limited in their mate options by their current body condition, which has consequences for offspring fitness in the short term. Our findings show that assortative mating based on body condition produces notable variation in the joint condition of the pair, which determines their breeding success.
- Published
- 2020
9. Age-dependent effects of carotenoids on sexual ornaments and reproductive performance of a long-lived seabird.
- Author
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Beamonte-Barrientos, René, Velando, Alberto, and Torres, Roxana
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SEA bird behavior ,CAROTENOIDS ,AGE ,BIRDS ,SEXUAL behavior in birds ,REPRODUCTIVE health ,BIRD growth ,BIRD evolution - Abstract
Understanding the mechanisms mediating age-dependent reproductive effort in wild animals is a major challenge in evolutionary ecology. The acquisition of molecules able to deter somatic damage could potentially improve reproductive performance, especially in physiologically compromised individuals. Carotenoids are antioxidants and immunoenhancers that animals can only obtain through diet. We tested in male blue-footed boobies whether carotenoid supplementation during incubation improves condition and reproductive performance, particularly of older males. Old birds showed lower levels of peroxidative damage than middle-aged males; however, changes of males' antioxidant capacity and peroxidative damage were not affected by carotenoid supplementation irrespective of age. Experimental old males displayed more colourful feet than control old males after 13 days of first carotenoid supplementation. The effect of carotenoids on male reproductive performance was dependent upon age: young males receiving extra-carotenoids produced chicks with smaller growth rates than control young males, whereas old males receiving extra-carotenoids produced chicks with higher growth rates than control old males. Our results highlight that carotenoids influence the relationship between age and reproductive performance and suggest a positive effect of carotenoids on reproduction of old males. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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10. Behavioural roles in booby mate switching.
- Author
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Pérez-Staples, Diana, Osorio-Beristain, Marcela, Rodríguez, Cristina, and Drummond, Hugh
- Subjects
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BLUE-footed booby , *BOOBIES (Birds) , *BIRD breeding , *HYPOTHESIS , *ANIMAL sexual behavior , *ERROR analysis in mathematics , *ANIMAL behavior - Abstract
The behaviour that mediates divorce and partner change in socially monogamous species is largely unstudied and unknown, although roles and adaptive functions in some birds have been inferred from breeding outcomes, partial behavioural records and captive studies. Here, roles and functions of natural within-season mate switching of a colonial bird were characterized by describing interactions over many days during the whole daylight period. Switching occurred in 5.9% of bluefooted booby pairs and was initiated by desertion of males or, less commonly, females. Three male desertions were consistent with either the Errors of Mate Choice or Incompatibility hypotheses but were better explained by our new Unfaithful Mate hypothesis because infidelity of the mate preceded desertion. Another two male desertions were more consistent with the Better Options hypothesis because the males switched to their ongoing extra-pair (EP) partners. One female desertion was consistent with the Errors of Mate choice or Incompatibility hypotheses, and another with the Better Options hypothesis. All five deserted females switched promptly to their EP partners. Thus, most switches consisted of (1) males replacing a possibly unsatisfactory partner with a new (already identified or to be identified) partner, or (2) deserted females pairing with their EP partners. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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11. Males use time whereas females prefer harmony: individual call recognition in the dimorphic blue-footed booby
- Author
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Dentressangle, Fabrice, Aubin, Thierry, and Mathevon, Nicolas
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BLUE-footed booby , *BIRD breeding , *SEXUAL partners , *SEXUAL behavior in birds , *SEXUAL dimorphism , *PARAMETER estimation , *BIRDS - Abstract
In breeding birds, acoustic signalling is often an important cue for reunion between sexual partners. However, in spite of its potential interest, mate recognition has rarely been examined by comparing the two sexes. We studied the blue-footed booby, Sula nebouxii, a socially monogamous seabird, with a dramatic call sexual dimorphism suggesting two different strategies for identity coding: the female call is an amplitude-modulated sound with a harmonic series slowly modulated in frequency, while the male call is a noisy whistle strongly modulated in frequency. To compare acoustic strategies between the sexes, we (1) recorded calls of both males and females, (2) searched for an individual signature and characterized it, and (3) tested, using a playback experiment, whether the calls of males and females were equally efficient for mate recognition. Results showed that an individual signature was present in the calls of both sexes. However, the acoustic parameters involved differed: female individual identification was principally achieved by a spectral analysis of the call whereas males'' identity relied mostly on temporal cues. More than 70% of both females and males tested in playback experiments successfully recognized their mate. This suggests that the coding strategies are equally efficient in terms of individual recognition between mates. From a broader point of view, our results underline the importance of assessing both males and females within the same investigative framework. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2012
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12. Safe betting: males help dull females only when they raise high-quality offspring.
- Author
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Morales, Judith, Torres, Roxana, and Velando, Alberto
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BIOLOGICAL evolution ,EGGSHELLS ,LIFE history theory ,ANIMAL offspring sex ratio ,BLUE-footed booby ,BIRD eggs ,BIRD reproduction ,ANIMAL species - Abstract
In evolutionary biology, whether parents should enhance or reduce parental care according to mate ornamentation is a subject of great debate. However, the evolution of female ornaments can shed light on this question. In theory, female ornamentation should be traded off against fecundity and thus cannot be wholly informative to males without a direct indication of fecundity. Hence, direct cues of offspring quality should affect the relationship between male investment and female ornamentation. Under this hypothesis, we manipulated two direct cues of offspring quality (egg size and color) after first egg laying in the blue-footed booby and registered male incubation patterns. In this species, foot color is a dynamic signal of current condition and in females is traded off with egg size. We found that males spent more time incubating when paired with dull females but only in nests with large eggs. Males also spent less time incubating small dull eggs. Results indicate that egg size, a direct cue of reproductive value, affected the relationship between male effort and female ornamentation. Males may be willing to help females that have invested in offspring at the expense of ornamentation, which suggests compensation when females are in low condition. Another possibility is that males relax their effort when paired with highly ornamented and fecund females because they have high parenting abilities. Our findings suggest that the information conveyed by female ornaments may depend on direct cues of fecundity. Results also highlight that parental decisions are complex, modulated by a combination of information sources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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13. Effects of recruiting age on senescence, lifespan and lifetime reproductive success in a long-lived seabird.
- Author
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Kim, Sin-Yeon, Velando, Alberto, Torres, Roxana, and Drummond, Hugh
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ANIMAL longevity , *BLUE-footed booby , *BOOBIES (Birds) , *AGING , *COST of reproduction (Ecology) , *LIFE history theory , *SOUTHERN oscillation - Abstract
Theories of ageing predict that early reproduction should be associated with accelerated reproductive senescence and reduced longevity. Here, the influence of age of first reproduction on reproductive senescence and lifespan, and consequences for lifetime reproductive success (LRS), were examined using longitudinal reproductive records of male and female blue-footed boobies ( Sula nebouxii) from two cohorts (1989 and 1991). The two sexes showed different relationships between age of first reproduction and rate of senescent decline: the earlier males recruited, the faster they experienced senescence in brood size and breeding success, whereas in females, recruiting age was unrelated to age-specific patterns of reproductive performance. Effects of recruiting age on lifespan, number of reproductive events and LRS were cohort- and/or sex-specific. Late-recruiting males of the 1989 cohort lived longer but performed as well over the lifetime as early recruits, suggesting the existence of a trade-off between early recruitment and long lifespan. In males of the 1991 cohort and females of both cohorts, recruiting age was apparently unrelated to lifespan, but early recruits reproduced more frequently and fledged more chicks over their lifetime than late recruits. Male boobies may be more likely than females to incur long-term costs of early reproduction, such as early reproductive senescence and diminished lifespan, because they probably invest more heavily than females. In the 1991 cohort, which faced the severe environmental challenge of an El Niño event in the first year of life, life-history trade-offs of males may have been masked by effects of individual quality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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14. Could specialization to cold-water upwelling systems influence gene flow and population differentiation in marine organisms? A case study using the blue-footed booby, Sula nebouxii.
- Author
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Taylor, Scott A., Maclagan, Laura, Anderson, David J., and Friesen, Vicki L.
- Subjects
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FORAGING behavior , *CASE studies , *BLUE-footed booby , *SEA bird behavior , *UPWELLING (Oceanography) , *CLIMATE & biogeography , *GENETIC engineering - Abstract
We assessed population differentiation and gene flow across the range of the blue-footed booby ( Sula nebouxii) (1) to test the generality of the hypothesis that tropical seabirds exhibit higher levels of population genetic differentiation than their northern temperate counterparts, and (2) to determine if specialization to cold-water upwelling systems increases dispersal, and thus gene flow, in blue-footed boobies compared with other tropical sulids. Work was carried out on islands in the eastern tropical Pacific Ocean from Mexico to northern Peru. We collected samples from 173 juvenile blue-footed boobies from nine colonies spanning their breeding distribution and used molecular markers (540 base pairs of the mitochondrial control region and seven microsatellite loci) to estimate population genetic differentiation and gene flow. Our analyses included classic population genetic estimation of pairwise population differentiation, population growth, isolation by distance, associations between haplotypes and geographic locations, and analysis of molecular variance, as well as Bayesian analyses of gene flow and population differentiation. We compared our results with those for other tropical seabirds that are not specialized to cold-water upwellings, including brown ( Sula leucogaster), red-footed ( S. sula) and masked ( S. dactylatra) boobies. Blue-footed boobies exhibited weak global population differentiation at both mitochondrial and nuclear loci compared with all other tropical sulids. We found evidence of high levels of gene flow between colonies within Mexico and between colonies within the southern portion of the range, but reduced gene flow between these regions. We also found evidence for population growth, isolation by distance and weak phylogeographic structure. Tropical seabirds can exhibit weak genetic differentiation across large geographic distances, and blue-footed boobies exhibit the weakest population differentiation of any tropical sulid studied thus far. The weak population genetic structure that we detected in blue-footed boobies may be caused by increased dispersal, and subsequently increased gene flow, compared with other sulids. Increased dispersal by blue-footed boobies may be the result of the selective pressures associated with cold-water upwelling systems, to which blue-footed boobies appear specialized. Consideration of foraging environment may be particularly important in future studies of marine biogeography. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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15. Occasional inter-sex differences in diet and foraging behavior of the Blue-footed Booby: maximizing chick rearing in a variable environment?
- Author
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Castillo-Guerrero, José and Mellink, Eric
- Subjects
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BOOBIES (Birds) , *DIMORPHISM in animals , *BIRD behavior , *FORAGING behavior , *BIRD ecology , *BIRD communities , *BIRD food - Abstract
Labor division in parental care and reduction of inter-sex competition by division of the foraging niche have been suggested as part of the evolutionary basis for reversed sexual size dimorphism in boobies (Sulidae). To test the potential viability of both hypotheses for the maintenance of dimorphism, we studied parental care and foraging behavior of the Blue-footed Booby ( Sula nebouxii) in two colonies in the Gulf of California, Mexico. Proportion of time spent at the nest, feeding frequency, and time devoted to nest defense were used as indicators of parental care. Foraging ecology was evaluated through the number and duration of foraging trips, proportion of time dedicated to flight and to active feeding, rate and depth of diving, and diet. We found some inter-sex differences in foraging only under high demand conditions, such as food shortage or large broods. Inconsistent inter-sex differences seem to be part of a strategy to maximize chick rearing under a variable environmental regime. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Biliverdin-based egg coloration is enhanced by carotenoid supplementation.
- Author
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Morales, Judith, Velando, Alberto, and Torres, Roxana
- Subjects
BLUE-footed booby ,EGGSHELLS ,PROTECTIVE coloration (Biology) ,CAROTENOIDS ,LIFE history theory ,PIGMENTS ,IMMUNE system ,ANTIOXIDANTS - Abstract
vian eggshell color is remarkably variable among and within species and its possible function has long been controversial. Female birds use biliverdin pigment to color their eggs blue and green. Although evidence is accumulating that blue-green eggshell coloration is costly to produce, the exact mechanisms underlying its expression are little studied. Biliverdin pigment is involved in important maintenance functions such as immune and antioxidant defenses and shows similar properties to carotenoid pigments. Carotenoids play a role as immunoenhancers and have the potential to ameliorate the impact of oxidative processes, although their antioxidant function could be minor for some bird species. Important life-history components can be limited by carotenoid availability, including sexual displays and fecundity. Here we explored if biliverdin-based eggshell pigmentation was affected by carotenoid availability in a seabird, by performing a carotenoid supplementation experiment in female blue-footed boobies ( Sula nebouxii) after laying their first egg. In this species, blue eggshell color is associated with incubation patterns, and carotenoid availability affects the crucial trade-off between female foot ornamentation and fecundity. We found that under natural conditions, there was a decline in eggshell color with laying order, suggesting pigment limitation for females. However, carotenoid-supplemented females had enhanced second egg coloration compared to controls, and the color increase was independent of their previous pigment allocation to the first egg. Our results suggest that biliverdin-based eggshell coloration is costly to produce and can be alleviated by current carotenoid availability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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17. Climatic influence on demographic parameters of a tropical seabird varies with age and sex.
- Author
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ORO, DANIEL, TORRES, ROXANA, RODRIGUEZ, CRISTINA, and DRUMMOND, HUGH
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SEA birds , *BOOBIES (Birds) , *ANIMAL populations , *POPULATION biology , *CLIMATE change , *BIOTIC communities - Abstract
In marine ecosystems climatic fluctuation and other physical variables greatly influence population dynamics, but differential effects of physical variables on the demographic parameters of the two sexes and different age classes are largely unexplored. We analyzed the effects of climate on the survival and recruitment of both sexes and several age classes of a long-lived tropical seabird, the Blue-footed Booby (Sula nebouxii), using long-term observations on marked individuals. Results demonstrated a complex interaction between yearly fluctuations in climate (both local and global indexes, during both winter and breeding season) and the sex and age of individuals. Youngest birds' survival and. recruitment were commonly affected by local climate, whereas oldest birds' parameters tended to be constant and less influenced by environmental variables. These results confirm the theoretical prediction that sex- and age-related variation in life-history demographic traits is greater under poor environmental conditions, and they highlight the importance of including variability in fitness components in demographic and evolutionary models. Males and females showed similar variation in survival but different recruitment patterns, in relation to both age and the spatial scale of climatic influence (local or global). Results indicate different life-history tactics for each sex and different ages, with birds likely trying to maximize their fitness by responding to the environmental contingencies of each year. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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18. Senescence of Maternal Effects: Aging Influences Egg Quality and Rearing Capacities of a Long-Lived Bird.
- Author
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Beamonte-Barrientos, René, Velando, Alberto, Drummond, Hugh, and Torres, Roxana
- Subjects
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AGING , *LONGITUDINAL method , *BLUE-footed booby , *BABY birds , *EGG quality , *CHICKS , *BIRD breeding , *IMMUNE response , *AGE , *ANIMALS - Abstract
Senescence could depress prenatal and postnatal capacities of mothers to invest in offspring. Longitudinal observations on the blue-footed booby (Sula nebouxii) revealed a quadratic effect of female age on fledgling production and cohort differences in rate of reproductive decline. By swapping clutches between females of different ages, we tested whether reproductive senescence is due to decline in egg quality or capacity to care. As laying mothers aged, egg size, ulna length of 5-day-old chicks, and ulna growth of second chicks up to age 30 days declined, and as rearing mothers aged, ulna growth and cellular mediated immune response of second chicks diminished. Oddly, senescent females (>11 years) produced more fledglings when rearing offspring of middle-aged females (8-11 years) than when rearing offspring of senescent or young females. Thus, senescence reduced egg quality and rearing capacities, and reproductive success of senescent mothers depended on prenatal effects associated with the age of the laying mother. Reproductive senescence of boobies may involve constraints on resources allocated to reproduction as well as adaptive adjustment of provision and care according to offspring value, implying that negative effects of senescence on offspring survival can be ameliorated by plasticity in postlaying or postnatal care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Species- and sex-specific differences in foraging behaviour and foraging zones in blue-footed and brown boobies in the Gulf of California.
- Author
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Weimerskirch, Henri, Shaffer, Scott A., Tremblay, Yann, Costa, Daniel P., Gadenne, Hélène, Kato, Akiko, Ropert-Coudert, Yan, Sato, Katsufumi, and Aurioles, David
- Subjects
ANIMAL species ,MARINE ecology ,BOOBIES (Birds) ,FORAGING behavior ,SEA bird behavior ,DATA loggers ,SEXUAL dimorphism in animals - Abstract
The article presents the study conducted regarding the species-specific and sex-specific differences in the foraging behaviour and zones of the two sympatric seabirds in the Gulf of California, Mexico. The study will examine the diving behavior, movement and activity of brown boobies and blue-footed boobies rearing young chicks using the highly accurate data loggers. The scheme also aims to disentangle the respective impact of species and sex on the observed foraging behaviour of the boobies. The result shows that the sex-specific differences of the seabirds which totally determined by their body size and mass are affected by the biomechanical constraints.
- Published
- 2009
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20. Simultaneous positive and negative density-dependent dispersal in a colonial bird species.
- Author
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Sin-Yeon Kim, Torres, Roxana, and Drummond, Hugh
- Subjects
- *
ANIMAL dispersal , *BLUE-footed booby , *COLONIAL birds , *ANIMAL species , *HABITATS , *HABITAT selection , *ANIMAL ecology , *RESOURCE partitioning (Ecology) , *ORNITHOLOGY - Abstract
Contradictory patterns of density-dependent animal dispersal can potentially be reconciled by integrating the conspecific attraction hypothesis with the traditional competition hypothesis. We propose a hypothesis that predicts a U-shaped relationship between density and both natal and breeding dispersal distance. Using 10 years of observations on a breeding colony of the Blue-footed Booby (Sula nebouxii), the hypothesis was confirmed by documenting simultaneous positive and negative density-dependent dispersal distances in natal and breeding dispersal of males and breeding dispersal of females within the colony. Point-pattern analyses demonstrated that the breeding sites of Blue-looted Boobies were highly aggregated in all years within a large study area. and aggregation presumably resulted in heterogeneity in patch density throughout the colony. As predicted, at moderate to high densities, dispersal distances showed positive density dependence, with individuals moving to lower density patches. In contrast, at low to moderate densities, dispersal distances showed negative density dependence, with individuals moving to higher density patches. In both sexes of the 1994 cohort, the higher the mean density in patches used by an individual over the long term (up to age I 1 years), the fewer fledglings it produced. A positive effect of density on long- term reproductive success was not detected, possibly because birds that failed during pair formation or incubation were not sampled. Density of conspecifics may be an important influence on habitat selection of breeders, and dispersal may tend to carry individuals to patches where pair formation opportunities are better and negative effects of competition on reproductive success are reduced. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Maternal investment in eggs is affected by male feet colour and breeding conditions in the blue-footed booby, Sula nebouxii.
- Author
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Dentressangle, Fabrice, Boeck, Lourdes, and Torres, Roxana
- Subjects
EGGS ,BLUE-footed booby ,BOOBIES (Birds) ,ANDROSTENEDIONE ,BREEDING ,ANIMAL breeding - Abstract
Females are expected to vary investment in offspring according to variables that may influence the offspring fitness in a way that optimises her inclusive fitness for a particular context. Thus, when sexual ornaments signal the quality of the male, females might invest in reproduction as a function of the attractiveness of their mate. We tested whether breeding conditions and male feet colour influence reproductive decisions of blue-footed booby females. In the blue-footed booby, male feet colour is a dynamic condition-dependent sexually selected trait that is related to paternal effort. During two consecutive years, an El Niño year (poor breeding conditions) and a year with good breeding conditions, we experimentally reduced male attractiveness by modifying their feet colour after the first egg was laid and recorded female investment in the second egg. We found that, relative to the first egg in the clutch, females laid heavier second eggs during the poor year than during the good year. Females paired with males with duller feet colour reduced second-egg mass and volume and delayed the laying of the second egg, independently of the year. Absolute yolk androstenedione (A4) concentration (but not testosterone, T) in second eggs was higher during a poor year than during a good year. Only during a year with poor breeding conditions, females paired with experimental males decreased the relative A4 concentration (but not T) in the second egg compared to control females. Thus, blue-footed booby females probably favour brood reduction by decreasing egg quality and increasing size asymmetry between chicks when the breeding and the mate conditions are poor. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Development of a linear dominance hierarchy in nestling birds
- Author
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Valderrábano-Ibarra, Claudia, Brumon, Ireri, and Drummond, Hugh
- Subjects
- *
BLUE-footed booby , *SUBMISSIVENESS , *BOOBIES (Birds) , *ANIMAL behavior - Abstract
Theoreticians propose that trained winning and losing are important processes in creating linear animal dominance hierarchies, and experiments have shown that both processes can occur in animals, but their actual roles in creating natural hierarchies are unknown. We described agonism in 18 broods of three blue-footed boobies, Sula nebouxii, a species for which trained winning and losing have been demonstrated, to infer how these processes generate and maintain a natural hierarchy. Ranks in the linear hierarchy that emerged in every brood were initially assigned by asymmetries in age, size and maturity, which led to differences between broodmates in levels of expressed and received aggression and, consequently, to differences in the training of their aggressiveness and submissiveness. Later, ranks appeared to be maintained by the chicks'' acquired aggressive and submissive tendencies combined with ongoing effects of persisting differences in size and maturity. Our results suggest that trained winning and trained losing are important in the construction of booby hierarchies but that these two axes of learning are largely independent. Increase in submissiveness occurs over a period of about 10–20 days, and the level of submissiveness reached varies with the amount of aggression received. After training, submissiveness is apparently maintained by a lower level of aggression and increasing use of threats. Threats become increasingly effective as chicks age, but are never as effective as attacks. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Lifetime philopatry in the blue-footed booby: a longitudinal study.
- Author
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Kim, Sin-Yeon, Torres, Roxana, Domínguez, César A., and Drummond, Hugh
- Abstract
Philopatry over the lifetime and its relationship with reproductive success were examined using longitudinal records of nest location and reproduction of individual blue-footed boobies. Males showed shorter natal dispersal than females, and natal dispersal distance of both sexes were unrelated to either first reproductive success or lifetime reproductive success. Throughout the early lifetime, males and females nested closer to their first breeding sites than to their natal sites, and comparison with a simulation of successive breeding dispersals in random directions showed that male and female blue-footed boobies are philopatric to the first breeding site. Therefore, throughout the early lifetime, the first breeding site seems to function as a point of reference for breeding site use together with the previous season's site. Males and females with shorter natal dispersal distances showed stronger lifetime philopatry to their first breeding sites, suggesting stable individual variation in competitive ability or dispersal phenotype. However, early lifetime philopatry to first breeding sites was unrelated to annual breeding success. Compared with simple fidelity to previous breeding sites, lifetime philopatry to first breeding sites should result in increased kin interactions and greater selection for kin recognition, altruism and inbreeding avoidance, as well as long-term familiarity with neighbors. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. SEASONAL EGG-MASS VARIATION AND LAYING SEQUENCE IN A BIRD WITH FACULTATIVE BROOD REDUCTION.
- Author
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D'Alba, Liliana and Torres, Roxana
- Subjects
- *
ANIMAL clutches , *BLUE-footed booby , *BIRDS , *BREEDING , *SEA birds , *EGGS - Abstract
Females may maximize their lifetime reproductive output by adjusting their investment in each breeding event to the perceived likelihood of success. The Blue-footed Booby (Sula nebouxii) is a long-lived seabird with facultative siblicide. We examined whether there is differential resource allocation to eggs with laying order and whether greater egg mass increases hatching probability, chick survival, hatching interval, and mass and size at hatching. We found that the relative investment in first and second eggs decreased as the season advanced: second eggs were slightly (1.5%) heavier than first eggs in early clutches; by contrast, first eggs were 2% heavier than second eggs in late clutches. Accordingly, hatching probability increased with laying date for first eggs and decreased for second eggs. The mass of the egg increased hatching probability; and no effect on chick survival was detected. Laying interval increased after a heavier egg was laid, and heavier eggs produced heavier hatchlings. Hatching intervals were positively related to laying intervals, but egg mass was unrelated to the length of the incubation period and the hatching interval. Our results suggest that egg mass influences embryo survival and that Blue-footed Booby females may adaptively allocate resources to eggs of different laying order according to breeding conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Tactics, effectiveness and avoidance of mate guarding in the blue-footed booby ( Sula nebouxii).
- Author
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Pérez-Staples, Diana and Drummond, Hugh
- Subjects
BLUE-footed booby ,ANIMAL courtship ,AGGRESSION (Psychology) ,ANIMAL psychology ,ANIMAL behavior - Abstract
We examined the dynamics and avoidance of mate guarding, by males and females, in the blue-footed booby, in which the two social mates are usually simultaneously present on the territory but each of them is unmonitored by the other for one-quarter of its time. Both sexes were promiscuous and liable to switch mates. Cuckolded individuals did not increase their overall presence on the territory, but in response to the extra-pair (EP) courtships of their mates, both sexes doubled their rate of intra-pair (IP) courtship and sometimes showed aggression. The male or female's presence depressed the social mate's EP activity, but intra-pair courtship had no such effect, tending even to propitiate that EP activity. Similarly, when females responded to their social mates' EP courtship with approach or aggression, disruption of EP activity was short-lived. Promiscuous females modified their diurnal pattern of attendance, as if attempting to sidestep monitoring by their mates, but cuckolded males matched the modification. Both sexes tended to perform their EP activities at a distance when their mates were present, possibly to evade monitoring or disruption by their mates. Male and female boobies cannot monitor their mates continuously, they do little to facultatively adjust their presence on territory to the risk of infidelity, and their immediate responses to overt infidelity have only the briefest impact; but the information they acquire while monitoring their mates may be critical to constraining their mates' infidelity and also to calibrating their own reproductive investment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Male coloration and chick condition in blue-footed booby: a cross-fostering experiment.
- Author
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Velando, Alberto, Torres, Roxana, and Espinosa, Irene
- Subjects
BLUE-footed booby ,BOOBIES (Birds) ,BIRDS ,ANIMAL sexual behavior ,ANIMAL courtship ,SEXUAL selection - Abstract
Sexual selection models suggest that female choice is based on male traits that indicate their genetic or environmental condition, consequently enhancing her reproductive success by direct or indirect benefits. We investigated the relationship between male foot colour and offspring condition in the blue-footed booby, a socially monogamous seabird, with conspicuous and variably condition-dependent coloured feet that are selected by females. In a cross-fostering experiment, we found that chick condition was related to the foot colour of the foster father and, to some extent, to the foot colour of the genetic father; thus overall, the father’s sexual ornamentation (genetic and foster) explained 32% of variance of chick condition. These data suggest that foot colour, a dynamic sexually selected trait, is mostly a signal of parental contribution. In species in which males provide parental care, females may choose mates with higher parental ability. Overall, our data suggest that colourful integuments are honest signals of parental ability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. A dynamic trait affects continuous pair assessment in the blue-footed booby, Sula nebouxii.
- Author
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Torres, Roxana and Velando, Alberto
- Subjects
BLUE-footed booby ,BOOBIES (Birds) ,ANIMAL courtship ,SEXUAL selection ,ANIMAL sexual behavior ,ANIMAL behavior ,SOCIOBIOLOGY ,GENETIC psychology - Abstract
Bright colours of male birds have often been shown to be the target of sexual selection through female choice, yet few studies have looked at the role of colour expressed after pairing on female motivation and behaviour. Here we analyse the role of an integumentary colour in the spectral range of 400–700 nm, the foot colour in male blue-footed boobies, Sula nebouxii, which is prominently displayed during pair courtship. Measurements early in the breeding season showed that foot colour of courting males is pale (high values of brightness) and has an aqua-blue chroma, and females in better body condition were mated to males with brighter feet. We carried out an experimental manipulation which modified the foot colour of males in courtship, making it closer to the foot colour of males in low nutritional state. We found that females paired to experimental males courted less and were less likely to copulate than females in the control group. Male behaviour was apparently unaffected by the manipulation; thus the change in female behaviour can be attributed exclusively to foot colour manipulation. These results strongly support the hypothesis of female preference for an integumentary colour and suggest that this dynamic trait is used as a male ornament after pairing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Differential body condition regulation by males and females in response to experimental manipulations of brood size and parental effort in the blue-footed booby.
- Author
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Velando, Alberto and Alonso-Alvarez, Carlos
- Subjects
- *
RESOURCE allocation , *SEA birds - Abstract
Summary 1. In long-lived species, such as seabirds, the allocation of resources between self-maintenance and reproduction is of particular interest because only a small reduction in adult survival may have a large negative effect on lifetime reproductive success. There is much debate about whether seabirds have a fixed or flexible level of investment in their current reproduction, and it has been proposed that parents can regulate the risk of an increase in mortality under the control of a mass threshold. 2. Body mass change as response to experimental manipulations of parental effort was examined in blue-footed boobies (Sula nebouxii Mine-Edwards), a sexually size-dimorphic seabird, with females approximately 31% heavier than males. 3. First, paternal effort was manipulated by trimming the flight feathers and thereby handicapping males during the chick-rearing period. Mass remained stable in handicapped males, while there was a reduction of female body mass as response to the handicapped partner. The handicapping of males had a significant effect on chick mass. 4. Secondly, an experiment was made by enlarging and decreasing broods of two chicks to three and one during the first week after hatching. Body mass of females, but not males, was lower in enlarged broods, and body mass of males, but not females, was higher in the reduced broods when the chicks were 45 days old. Chick body masses were lower among enlarged broods than among reduced and control broods. 5. Overall, these and other results revealed that blue-footed boobies have a sex-specific body mass regulation. Males had a fixed body mass at the end of experiments; they were working at some physiological maximum or were unwilling to pay the cost in terms of future survival, when the effort demanded was increased. Females performed a flexible effort and were working with a buffer of nutritional reserves that they used when necessary. Below a critical level, females preferentially allocated resources to the maintenance of their body condition at the expense of investment in current reproduction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Tick infestation of chicks in a seabird colony varies with local breeding synchrony, local nest density and habitat structure
- Author
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Alejandra G. Ramos and Hugh Drummond
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Tick infestation ,biology ,Ecology ,fungi ,Tick ,Booby ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease_cause ,medicine.disease ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Nest ,Habitat ,biology.animal ,parasitic diseases ,Infestation ,medicine ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Sula nebouxii ,Seabird ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Parasites are a major risk for group-living animals and seabirds are notoriously susceptible to ectoparasite infestations because they commonly nest in dense colonies. Ticks parasitize seabirds across all biogeographical regions and they can be particularly harmful to nestlings, but the ecological factors that affect their transmission to chicks are little studied and poorly understood. Here we show that abundance of tick larvae in blue-footed booby (Sula nebouxii) broods varies with local nest synchrony and density, and also with habitat structure: abundance increased with local breeding synchrony, was linearly and quadratically related to local nest density, and was highest toward the southern end of the study area which has suitable (boulder-rich) habitat for ticks. Also, with increasing chick age infestation first increased and then declined. The results of this study highlight how local physical and social environmental factors influence infestation of seabird nestlings by ticks. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2017
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- View/download PDF
30. Lead, cadmium and mercury in the blood of the blue-footed booby (Sula nebouxii) from the coast of Sinaloa, Gulf of California, Mexico
- Author
-
Guillermo Fernández, Miriam Lerma, Jorge Ruelas-Inzunza, and José Alfredo Castillo-Guerrero
- Subjects
Male ,0106 biological sciences ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Zoology ,010501 environmental sciences ,Aquatic Science ,Biology ,Booby ,Oceanography ,01 natural sciences ,Birds ,biology.animal ,Animals ,Mexico ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Cadmium ,Ecology ,Reproduction ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,Heavy metals ,Environmental availability ,Mercury ,biology.organism_classification ,Pollution ,Mercury (element) ,Lead ,chemistry ,Blue-footed booby ,Female ,Seasons ,Sula nebouxii ,Seabird ,Water Pollutants, Chemical ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
We used blood samples of the Blue-footed Booby, considering sex (female and male) and age-class (adult and chick) of individuals at different breeding stages during two breeding seasons (2010-2011 and 2011-2012) in Isla El Rancho, Sinaloa, to determine lead, cadmium, and mercury concentrations. Lead and cadmium concentrations were below our detection limit (0.05 and 0.36ppm, respectively). A higher concentration of mercury was found in early stages of breeding, likely related to changes in mercury environmental availability. Mercury concentrations in adults did not relate with their breeding output. Males and adults had higher mercury concentration than females and chicks. We provide information of temporal, sex and age-related variations in the concentrations of mercury in blood of the Blue-footed Booby.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Long-term population dynamics reveal that survival and recruitment of tropical boobies improve after a hurricane
- Author
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Sergio Ancona, Hugh Drummond, J. Jaime Zúñiga-Vega, and Cristina Rodríguez
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,education.field_of_study ,biology ,Ecology ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,Foraging ,Population ,Booby ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Mark and recapture ,biology.animal ,Population growth ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Sula nebouxii ,Seabird ,Vital rates ,education ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Variability in population numbers is a central issue in evolutionary ecology and also in biodiversity conservation. However, for most seabirds this information is lacking and tropical populations are virtually unstudied. Long-term studies are warranted because world's seabird populations exhibit an overall declining trend since 1950. Using data spanning 23 yr, we investigated how adult survival, local recruitment, and their relative contributions to population growth (λ) vary over time in the blue-footed booby Sula nebouxii, a long-lived locally foraging seabird that breeds in tropical waters. In addition, we investigated whether booby demographic rates exhibit the same declining trend observed in other seabirds, whether these rates are impacted by hurricanes, and whether these potential impacts differ between sexes. Our analysis of 4608 capture–recapture histories revealed that survival and recruitment were nearly equal between males and females, exhibited a declining trend over the last 23 yr, and in both sexes, these vital rates improved after a hurricane. The declining trend in recruitment was slightly more attenuated in males. These results add to the current evidence for an overall declining trend in world's seabird populations and extend its confirmation to the warm eastern tropical Pacific. Moreover, they provide the first evidence that hurricanes may favor natural populations. As a result of the declining trend and variation in survival and recruitment, λ exhibited a slight decline and substantial variation over the 23 yr. However, most λ values were equal to or higher than 1, and the long-term average indicates population increase. The ability of blue-footed boobies to maintain a positive population balance despite of negative trends in their vital rates might result from canalization of adult survival (the vital rate that contributes most to λ and shows lower variation compared to recruitment) against environmental variability.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Local and interannual variations in mercury and cadmium in eggs of eight seabird species of the Sinaloa coast, México
- Author
-
Miguel Betancourt-Lozano, J. Alfredo Castillo-Guerrero, Guillermo Fernández, Jaqueline García-Hernández, and Juan Pablo Ceyca
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,biology ,Ecology ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Pelecanus occidentalis ,Cormorant ,Royal tern ,010501 environmental sciences ,Booby ,biology.organism_classification ,01 natural sciences ,Larus heermanni ,biology.animal ,Laughing gull ,Environmental Chemistry ,Seabird ,Sula nebouxii ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
Mercury (Hg) and cadmium (Cd) concentrations in eggs of 8 seabird species inhabiting 5 coastal ecosystems in Sinaloa, Mexico were determined during 2 breeding seasons (2012 and 2013): blue-footed booby (Sula nebouxii), brown booby (Sula leucogaster), double-crested cormorant (Phalacrocorax auritus), magnificent frigatebird (Fregata magnificens), brown pelican (Pelecanus occidentalis), royal tern (Thalasseus maximus), laughing gull (Leucophaeus atricilla), and Heermann's gull (Larus heermanni). The interspecific differences found in the concentrations of both metals were attributed to the diet and foraging ecology of the species. The highest Hg concentrations were detected in piscivorous species (brown pelican, 0.42 µg/g; brown booby, 0.31 µg/g; blue-footed booby, 0.26 µg/g; and double-crested cormorant, 0.23 µg/g); whereas species with more varied diets presented the highest Cd concentrations (Heermann's gull, 0.31 µg/g; laughing gull, 0.27 µg/g; and magnificent frigatebird, 0.27 µg/g). Cadmium concentrations were significantly greater in 2013 than 2012 for most species, and brown pelican and laughing gull also had higher Hg concentrations in 2013 in Santa Maria Bay, suggesting a relationship as a result of the changes either in oceanographic conditions or in continental runoff. Mercury concentrations in brown pelican and Cd concentrations in Heermann's gull and laughing gull were above threshold levels for adverse effects on reproduction and survival. Environ Toxicol Chem 2016;35:2330-2338. �� 2016 SETAC.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Zinc concentrations in Blue-footed booby (Sula nebouxii) eggs, nestlings, and adults
- Author
-
Miriam Lerma, Guillermo Fernández, José Alfredo Castillo-Guerrero, and Jaqueline García-Hernández
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Developmental stage ,biology ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Zinc ,Aquatic Science ,Booby ,Oceanography ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Animal science ,chemistry ,Dry weight ,biology.animal ,Blue-footed booby ,Seasonal breeder ,Seabird ,Sula nebouxii ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Zinc is essential for animal metabolism, but the variation in Zn concentrations within seabird populations has been seldom explored. We collected Blue-footed booby (Sula nebouxii) eggs during 2012 and 2013 and blood samples from nestlings and adults during 2011 and 2012 in Sinaloa, Mexico, to evaluate differences in Zn concentrations among years, ages, sexes, and breeding stages. Zinc concentrations in eggs ranged between 27.3 and 64.9 ppm (dry weight), whereas Zn levels in the blood of nestlings and adults ranged between 16.1 and 53.1 ppm (dry weight). Egg Zn concentrations did not differ due to developmental stage, although Zn concentrations were significantly higher in 2013 than in 2012. Nestling Zn concentrations differed between years and decreased gradually with age. Chicks had significantly higher Zn concentrations than those of adults. Once nestlings stopped growing, females presented higher Zn concentrations than males. Adult Zn concentrations were higher during the pre-laying period than during the other breeding stages. Our results suggest that growth, sex, and breeding stage affect blood Zn concentrations, which may be due to stage-specific requirements. When compared with those of other seabird species, the Zn concentrations reported here are intermediate, and we did not detect adverse effects on either nestlings or adults.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Variably male-biased sex ratio in a marine bird with females larger than males.
- Author
-
Torres, Roxana and Drummond, Hugh
- Abstract
When the costs of rearing males and females differ progeny sex ratios are expected to be biased toward the less expensive sex. Blue-footed booby ( Sula nebouxii) females are larger and roughly 32% heavier than males, thus presumably more costly to rear. We recorded hatching and fledging sex ratios in 1989, and fledging sex ratios during the next 5 years. In 1989, the sample of 751 chicks showed male bias at hatching (56%) and at fledging (57% at ˜90 days). Fledging sex ratios during the five subsequent reproductive seasons were at unity (1 year) or male-biased, varying from 56% to 70%. Male bias was greater during years when mean sea surface temperature was warmer and food was presumably in short supply. During two warm-water years (only) fledging sex ratio varied with hatching date. Proportions of male fledglings increased with date from 0.48 to 0.73 in 1994, and from 0.33 to 0.79 in 1995. Similar results were obtained when the analysis was repeated using only broods with no nestling mortality, suggesting that the overall increase in the proportion of males over the season was the result of sex ratio adjustments at hatching. The male-biased sex ratio, and the increased male bias during poor breeding conditions supports the idea that daughters may be more costly than sons, and that their relative cost increases in poor conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Non-aggressive mate guarding by the blue-footed booby: a balance of female and male control.
- Author
-
Osorio-Beristain, Marcela and Drummond, Hugh
- Subjects
BLUE-footed booby ,BOOBIES (Birds) ,SEXUAL behavior in birds ,MATE selection ,SULIDAE - Abstract
Thirteen pairs of blue-footed boobies ( Sula nebouxii) were observed on their colony. Pairs courted frequently and, on average, copulated 24 times during the 30 days before laying, with 38% of those copulations occurring in the last 5 days (presumed fertile period). Males and females increased attendance at the nest site as laying approached. Seven females performed an average seven extra-pair copulations, with 1–2 paired male neighbors, but these were less concentrated in the presumed fertile period than within-pair copulations, and the last two copulations of all 7 females were with their social mates. Rates of female extra-pair copulations were six times lower when their social mate was present, and during the presumed fertile period, no female performed an extra-pair copulation in the presence of her mate. Males did not respond to infidelity of social mates with aggression, prompt copulation, retaliatory copulation, or increase in copulation. Seven of 13 males performed an average of five extra-pair copulations, with 1–3 paired female neighbors, before their own mates began egg-laying. The males' extra-pair copulations represented only 4% of their total copulations during their own mates' presumed fertile periods. Females, the larger sex, apparently control sexual access and copulate with extra males to achieve extra-pair fertilization. Males pursue a mixed strategy: they copulate with extra females, mostly outside their own mate's presumed fertile period, and they copulate increasingly with their social mate as laying approaches, probably assuring some paternity by mate guarding, involving attendance and courtship. Behavior of males and females is also consistent with other hypotheses for extensive joint nest site attendance: pairbonding, copulation access, and territory acquisition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Lack of age-related mosaic loss of W chromosome in long-lived birds.
- Author
-
Trujillo N, Martínez-Pacheco M, Soldatini C, Ancona S, Young RC, Albores-Barajas YV, Orta AH, Rodríguez C, Székely T, Drummond H, Urrutia AO, and Cortez D
- Subjects
- Animals, Birds genetics, Female, Humans, Male, Mammals genetics, Mosaicism, Sex Chromosomes genetics, Chromosomes, Human, Y, Evolution, Molecular
- Abstract
Females and males often exhibit different survival in nature, and it has been hypothesized that sex chromosomes may play a role in driving differential survival rates. For instance, the Y chromosome in mammals and the W chromosome in birds are often degenerated, with reduced numbers of genes, and loss of the Y chromosome in old men is associated with shorter life expectancy. However, mosaic loss of sex chromosomes has not been investigated in any non-human species. Here, we tested whether mosaic loss of the W chromosome (LOW) occurs with ageing in wild birds as a natural consequence of cellular senescence. Using loci-specific PCR and a target sequencing approach we estimated LOW in both young and adult individuals of two long-lived bird species and showed that the copy number of W chromosomes remains constant across age groups. Our results suggest that LOW is not a consequence of cellular ageing in birds. We concluded that the inheritance of the W chromosome in birds, unlike the Y chromosome in mammals, is more stable.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Variation in parental rearing expenditure triggers short-term physiological effects on offspring in a long-lived seabird
- Author
-
Guillermo Fernández, Erick González-Medina, Juan M. Sánchez-Guzmán, José Alfredo Castillo-Guerrero, Auxiliadora Villegas, José A. Masero, and Francisco Santiago-Quesada
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Offspring ,Physiological condition ,Zoology ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,010605 ornithology ,Term (time) ,Variation (linguistics) ,biology.animal ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Seabird ,Sula nebouxii ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. An unsuspected cost of mate familiarity: increased loss of paternity
- Author
-
Hugh Drummond, Cristina Rodríguez, Oscar Sánchez-Macouzet, and Alejandra G. Ramos
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Mate guarding ,biology ,05 social sciences ,Booby ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Increased risk ,Blue-footed booby ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Animal Science and Zoology ,050102 behavioral science & comparative psychology ,Sula nebouxii ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Demography - Abstract
The evolution of remating and prolonged pair bonds in animals has generally been explained in terms of improved coordination and cooperation between familiar individuals, but costs of mate familiarity have rarely been considered. A possible cost for males is increased risk of losing paternity if familiarity enables females to detect when alternative sires are desirable, evade mate guarding or invest more in infidelity. To test whether this familiarity cost exists, we examined whether extrapair paternity increases with bond length in the socially monogamous blue-footed booby, Sula nebouxii, using microsatellite-based analysis of 384 broods. Extrapair paternity increased from 9.4% of broods in first pairings to 21.6% in second pairings, then declined to 7.5% in third through eighth pairings. On their first remating with a female, males faced enhanced risk of losing paternity, but thereafter the risk was no greater than on first matings. However, after loss of paternity, males were no more likely to divorce. Effects of familiarity on extrapair paternity could influence the evolution and taxonomic distribution of remating and prolonged pair bonding in socially monogamous animals.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Regulation of breeding expenditure in the blue-footed booby, Sula nebouxii : an experimental approach
- Author
-
José Alfredo Castillo-Guerrero, José A. Masero, Francisco Santiago-Quesada, Erick González-Medina, Auxiliadora Villegas, Juan M. Sánchez-Guzmán, and Guillermo Fernández
- Subjects
biology ,Ecology ,Offspring ,Foraging ,biology.organism_classification ,Brood ,Nest ,biology.protein ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Creatine kinase ,Reproductive value ,Sula nebouxii ,Paternal care ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Demography - Abstract
In the short-term, reproductive expenditure has repercussions for survival and future reproductive output. In long-lived seabirds, parents are expected to adjust their reproductive investment based on their physiological and immune status and then respond to the needs of their offspring without incurring additional costs. However, the impacts of parental expenditures on physiological and immune status have not been well explored. We compared the foraging effort (number and duration of foraging trips), time at nest and physiological status (plasma metabolites, heterophil/lymphocyte (H/L) ratio, creatine kinase (CK) activity) and body condition index (BCI) of blue-footed boobies subjected to experimentally increased or decreased breeding demands. When parental reproductive demands were increased, adults made more foraging trips and decreased their time at the nest. The increases in adult physical activity were reflected in higher levels of creatine kinase/total protein (CK/TP, U/g) and higher H/L ratios, indicating that adjustments in foraging effort were reflected in their physiological status. When parental reproductive demands were reduced, parents adjusted their level of effort according to the lower needs of their offspring; as a result, their overall physiological status was greater than that of the controls, showing lower CK/TP levels and H/L ratios. Our findings indicate that parents modified their foraging effort in response to variation in the food demands of the brood to maintain reproductive value, but this adjustment had consequences for physiological status in both costs and benefits. Blue-footed boobies inhabit upwelling systems where they experience high environmental variability throughout their life span. Thus, the ability to adjust breeding effort may buffer breeding success under different scenarios, with short-term physiological expenditures possibly related to long-term survival.
- Published
- 2015
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40. Behaviorally Induced Camouflage: A New Mechanism of Avian Egg Protection
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Cristina Rodríguez, Hugh Drummond, Fernando Mayani-Parás, Mary Caswell Stoddard, and Rebecca M. Kilner
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Phenotypic plasticity ,biology ,Ecology ,Color ,Booby ,biology.organism_classification ,Bird egg ,Nesting Behavior ,Predation ,Birds ,Soil ,Phenotype ,Nest ,Larus heermanni ,Predatory Behavior ,Camouflage ,embryonic structures ,Animals ,Sula nebouxii ,Mexico ,Ecosystem ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Ovum - Abstract
When animals potentially occupy diverse microhabitats, how can camouflage be achieved? Here we combine descriptive and experimental methods to uncover a novel form of phenotypic plasticity in the camouflage of bird eggs that may be present in other avian taxa. Soil from the bare substrate adheres to the blue-footed booby’s (Sula nebouxii’s) pale eggs, which parents manipulate both under and on top of their webs. Analysis of digital images confirmed that dirtiness increases progressively during the first 16 days of the incubation period, making eggs more similar to the nest substrate. Observations of 3,668 single-egg clutches showed that the probability of egg loss declines progressively over the same time frame and then remains low for the rest of the 41-day incubation period. An experiment showed that when chicken eggs are soiled and exposed in artificial booby nests, they are less likely to be taken by Heermann’s gulls (Larus heermanni) than clean eggs.
- Published
- 2015
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41. Recruiting age influences male and female survival and population persistence in a long-lived tropical seabird
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Hugh Drummond, Sergio Ancona, María Cristina Carmona-Isunza, J. Jaime Zúñiga-Vega, and Cristina Rodríguez
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education.field_of_study ,biology ,Ecology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Population ,Booby ,biology.organism_classification ,Mark and recapture ,Animal ecology ,Population growth ,Sula nebouxii ,Reproduction ,education ,Matrix population models ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Demography ,media_common - Abstract
Variation in the age at first reproduction may have important implications for growth and dynamics of populations, but these potential impacts remain virtually unexplored. By using 26 years of data from a marked colony of blue-footed boobies Sula nebouxii (Milne-Edwards), we tested whether survival of early recruits is lower in comparison to late recruits, and investigate how different recruiting ages contribute to the persistence of the population. In addition, we simulated changes in the age at recruitment and estimated their impact on population fitness. Our analyses of 1310 capture–recapture histories revealed that the younger males and females initiated reproduction within the first 6 years of life, the lower were their mean annual survival probabilities. Survival did not differ between the sexes and the impact of recruiting age on survival was similar for males and females. Each additional year that male and female boobies delayed the start of reproduction meant an increase of roughly 2 % in their annual survival rates. Male and female recruits 2–5 years old contributed the same to the rate of population growth (λ) regardless of their particular age, but the contribution to population growth started to decline from age 6 years. According to our simulations, delaying reproduction beyond 5 years in the case of females, and beyond 6 years in the case of males, would negatively affect this booby population. Therefore, we suggest that there is selection against recruiting beyond 5–6 years old. This study adds to the nascent empirical literature on long-term fitness consequences of variation in the age at first reproduction in long-lived species, and provides insights into evolution of early and late reproduction and trade-offs from a demographic perspective.
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- 2015
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42. Lineage sorting in multihost parasites: Eidmanniella albescens and Fregatiella aurifasciata on seabirds from the Galapagos Islands
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Patricia G. Parker, Kevin P. Johnson, Jose L. Rivera-Parra, and Iris I. Levin
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cryptic speciation ,Ecology ,Phylogenetic tree ,Biodiversity ,Zoology ,Biology ,Louse ,parasites ,biology.organism_classification ,Fregata minor ,lineage sorting ,Genetic marker ,biology.animal ,Genetic structure ,Taxonomy (biology) ,Chewing lice ,Sula nebouxii ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,seabirds ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,Original Research - Abstract
Parasites comprise a significant percentage of the biodiversity of the planet and are useful systems to test evolutionary and ecological hypotheses. In this study, we analyze the effect of host species identity and the immediate local species assemblage within mixed species colonies of nesting seabirds on patterns of genetic clustering within two species of multihost ectoparasitic lice. We use three genetic markers (one mitochondrial, COI, and two nuclear, EF1-α and wingless) and maximum likelihood phylogenetic trees to test whether (1) parasites show lineage sorting based on their host species; and (2) switching of lineages to the alternate host species depends on the immediate local species assemblage of individual hosts within a colony. Specifically, we examine the genetic structure of two louse species: Eidmanniella albescens, infecting both Nazca (Sula granti) and blue-footed boobies (Sula nebouxii), and Fregatiella aurifasciata, infecting both great (Fregata minor) and magnificent frigatebirds (Fregata magnificens). We found that host species identity was the only factor explaining the patterns of genetic structure in both parasites. In both cases, there is evident genetic differentiation depending on the host species. Thus, a revision of the taxonomy of these louse species is needed. One possible explanation of this pattern is extremely low louse migration rates between host species, perhaps influenced by fine-scale spatial separation of host species within mixed colonies, and low parasite infrapopulation numbers.
- Published
- 2015
43. Temporal and sex-based variation in organochlorine pesticide levels in the blue-footed booby in two coastal colonies of Sinaloa, Mexico.
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Piña-Ortiz, Alberto, Ceyca-Contreras, Juan Pablo, Covantes-Rosales, Carlos Eduardo, Betancourt-Lozano, Miguel, and Castillo-Guerrero, José Alfredo
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ECOSYSTEM health ,PELAGIC fishes ,ORGANOCHLORINE pesticides ,COLONIES ,PESTICIDES ,RUNOFF ,BLOOD sampling - Abstract
The temporal, inter-site, and sex-based variation of 19 organochlorine pesticides (OCPs) in blood plasma samples collected from blue-footed boobies of two islands in Sinaloa, Mexico, was evaluated. The effect of OCPs was evaluated with the heterophil/lymphocyte ratio, micronucleated erythrocyte frequency, and scaled mass index. The OCP-group levels decreased as the breeding season progressed, and interannual (but not inter-colony) differences were detected. Intra-annual variation in OCP levels seemed to reflect run-off inputs, although other environmental processes may better explain the variation between years. Sex-based differences in OCP levels were likely related to ecological and physiological processes linked to breeding (e.g., egg-laying and use of lipid reserves). No correlations between OCP-group levels and biomarkers were detected. Small pelagic fishes are the main prey sources of blue-footed boobies and the targets of regional industrial fisheries, and thus blue-footed booby OCP levels could reflect ecosystem health and indicate potential risks for human consumers. Unlabelled Image • Sex-based differences in OCP levels are likely related to breeding physiology. • OCP levels decreased as the breeding season progressed • Interannual but not intercolony differences in OCP levels were detected. • Blue-footed booby OCP levels likely reflect ecosystem health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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44. Experiencing El Niño conditions during early life reduces recruiting probabilities but not adult survival
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J. Jaime Zúñiga-Vega, Hugh Drummond, Cristina Rodríguez, and Sergio Ancona
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0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,life history ,Booby ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,survival ,el niño southern oscillation ,Mark and recapture ,03 medical and health sciences ,Early adulthood ,lcsh:Science ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Biology (Whole Organism) ,biology.organism_classification ,Early life ,capture–recapture ,030104 developmental biology ,El Niño ,recruitment ,Warm water ,lcsh:Q ,Sula nebouxii ,early-life stress ,Food scarcity ,Demography ,Research Article - Abstract
In wild long-lived animals, analysis of impacts of stressful natal conditions on adult performance has rarely embraced the entire age span, and the possibility that costs are expressed late in life has seldom been examined. Using 26 years of data from 8541 fledglings and 1310 adults of the blue-footed booby ( Sula nebouxii ), a marine bird that can live up to 23 years, we tested whether experiencing the warm waters and food scarcity associated with El Niño in the natal year reduces recruitment or survival over the adult lifetime. Warm water in the natal year reduced the probability of recruiting; each additional degree (°C) of water temperature meant a reduction of roughly 50% in fledglings' probability of returning to the natal colony as breeders. Warm water in the current year impacted adult survival, with greater effect at the oldest ages than during early adulthood. However, warm water in the natal year did not affect survival at any age over the adult lifespan. A previous study showed that early recruitment and widely spaced breeding allow boobies that experience warm waters in the natal year to achieve normal fledgling production over the first 10 years; our results now show that this reproductive effort incurs no survival penalty, not even late in life. This pattern is additional evidence of buffering against stressful natal conditions via life-history adjustments.
- Published
- 2018
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45. Age-related parental care in a long-lived bird: implications for offspring development
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Hugh Drummond, Santiago Ortega, Cristina Rodríguez, Oscar Sánchez-Macouzet, and Andrea Urrutia
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0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Senescence ,Offspring ,Ecology ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Social relation ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Nest ,Animal ecology ,Age related ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Sula nebouxii ,Paternal care ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Demography - Abstract
In long-lived species, behaviour is expected to vary across the lifespan, first improving with maturation and experience and then declining with senescence, but measurement is rare, particularly during old age. Measuring nest defence intensity in 255 known-age blue-footed boobies (Sula nebouxii) of 19 age classes confirmed the inverted-U pattern: intensity of nest defence increased in young males and females until roughly 11–12 years and declined progressively afterwards. We discuss the processes that may generate this distinctive pattern. Regardless of the underlying processes, this study establishes the existence of age-related variation in parental care in a long-lived species. Natural variation in natal conditions has recently been shown to have long-term impacts on development, so this study raises the question whether age-related changes in parental care generate systematic variation in offspring phenotypes. In theory, age-related change in parental care can result in differences among offspring produced at different ages. However, parental behaviour has never been measured over the whole age-span of any long-lived species because of the difficulty of sampling very old animals in the field. We measured intensity of nest defence over the age-span and confirmed that blue-footed boobies exhibit an age-related quadratic pattern in this parental behaviour: defence intensity increases in early life and declines progressively afterwards. Our results imply that similar-shaped patterns may exist in other components of parental care, such as feeding and social interaction, potentially affecting the long-term development of offspring.
- Published
- 2017
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46. Extrapair behaviour reveals flexible female choosiness and mixed support for classic good genes in blue-footed boobies
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Hugh Drummond and Lynna Marie Kiere
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Attractiveness ,biology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Body size ,Booby ,biology.organism_classification ,Developmental psychology ,Courtship ,Male age ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Mating ,Sula nebouxii ,Psychology ,Sperm competition ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,media_common ,Demography - Abstract
The good genes hypothesis has long been a major focus of research on the function of extrapair (EP) behaviour by socially monogamous females. It predicts that females should be less faithful when paired to low-quality males and, as EP males become increasingly superior to their social mates, that EP males should be of higher quality than the males they cuckold. Evaluations have yielded mixed results, perhaps in part due to an overly strict interpretation of these predictions. A recent theoretical model demonstrated that while females with high-quality mates should be selective, those with low-quality males may gain good genes benefits by random EP mating, provided EP choosiness has costs, phenotypic indicators are imperfect and sperm competition favours genetic quality. We tested these classic and modified behavioural predictions in the blue-footed booby, Sula nebouxii, at two critical steps of EP interactions: courtship and copulation. Support for the classic good genes predictions was limited: EP courtship was more common in females with younger mates, but EP copulation following courtship was not predicted by social mate or relative male age, body size, condition, foot colour (a dynamic ornament) or breeding success, and these characteristics did not differ consistently between social and EP males. However, EP copulation increased with relative attractiveness (greener feet) of the EP male only when the social male was attractive, supporting the model's prediction that female choosiness should increase with social male attractiveness. Moreover, EP copulation probability decreased as EP males became increasingly superior to unattractive females, suggesting that EP males can also be choosy and may constrain female behaviour. Our results confirm that EP interactions involve more complexity than originally envisioned, warranting further studies that focus on behaviour and include all three main players: female, social mate and EP male.
- Published
- 2014
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47. Interactive effects of male and female age on extra-pair paternity in a socially monogamous seabird
- Author
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Hugh Drummond, Schyler O. Nunziata, Patricia Adair Gowaty, Brant C. Faircloth, Stacey L. Lance, Alejandra G. Ramos, and Cristina Rodríguez
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Infertility ,Genetics ,biology ,Offspring ,Sire ,Booby ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Mate choice ,Animal ecology ,medicine ,Seasonal breeder ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Sula nebouxii ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Demography - Abstract
Females sometimes obtain older sires for their offspring through extra-pair interactions, but how female age influences paternity is largely unexplored and interactive effects across the age span of both sexes have not been analyzed. To test whether female choice of sire age varies with female age in the blue-footed booby (Sula nebouxii), we examined associations between ages of both partners and the probability of extra-pair paternity (EPP) in 350 broods of parents up to 22 years old in a single breeding season. Extra-pair paternity enables a female to select an alternative sire for her offspring and could function to avoid or achieve particular combinations of parental ages. A male age × female age interaction revealed that in young females (≤4 years), EPP decreased with increasing age of the social partner, whereas in old females (≥8 years), it increased. Moreover, sires of extra-pair (EP) chicks of young females paired to young males were on average 6.33 years older than the females’ social partners. Since female boobies control copulatory access, this pattern could imply that young females choose old sires for their proven genetic quality and that old females avoid very old males because matings with them may risk infertility or genetic defects in offspring. Taking female age into account and observing across the whole age span may be necessary for understanding female age-based mate choice.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Enhanced male coloration after immune challenge increases reproductive potential
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Roxana Torres, Alberto Velando, and René Beamonte-Barrientos
- Subjects
Male ,Diphtheria-Tetanus Vaccine ,Cheating ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Booby ,Birds ,Courtship ,Immune system ,Immunity ,Animals ,Mexico ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,media_common ,Sex Characteristics ,biology ,Pigmentation ,Body Weight ,Mating Preference, Animal ,Clutch Size ,biology.organism_classification ,Animal Communication ,Vaccination ,Immunology ,Linear Models ,Female ,Immunocompetence ,Sula nebouxii ,Demography - Abstract
In many animal species, females select a mate on the basis of the expression of secondary sexual traits. A prevalent theory suggests that male ornaments are reliable indicators of immunocompetence, because the cost of immune function prevents cheating. However, sexual signalling is a component of male reproductive effort, and an immune challenge may also alter his perceived future prospects and hence signalling effort. In this study, blue-footed booby males (Sula nebouxii) were inoculated with a diphtheria-tetanus vaccine during courtship to investigate the consequences of mounting an immune response on signalling effort. We found that, after this immune challenge, on average, males increased their signalling effort but lost more body mass compared with control males. Importantly, vaccination affected the partner's reproductive decisions: compared with control females, females paired with vaccinated males laid eggs earlier and increased clutch volume in pairs that laid early. Overall, our results suggest that blue-footed booby males invest more in sexual signals when future breeding opportunities are at risk, eliciting a greater reproductive investment by their partners. Increased signalling effort by infected individuals may contrast the idea of sexual ornaments as signals of infection status.
- Published
- 2014
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49. Adoption and infanticide in an altricial colonial seabird, the Blue-footed Booby: the roles of nest density, breeding success, and sex-biased behavior
- Author
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Eric Mellink, José Alfredo Castillo-Guerrero, and Erick González-Medina
- Subjects
animal structures ,biology ,Aggression ,Ecology ,Booby ,biology.organism_classification ,Brood ,Altricial ,Nest ,biology.animal ,embryonic structures ,Blue-footed booby ,medicine ,Sula nebouxii ,medicine.symptom ,Seabird ,Demography - Abstract
We aimed to elucidate the factors that influence the frequency of adoption and infanticide in the Blue-footed Booby (Sula nebouxii), a seabird with biparental chick care and high chick-rearing costs. We obtained data from two colonies during four breeding seasons. In addition, we removed parents from their nests for short periods of time (10 min) and fitted their chicks with polyethylene foam protectors, in order to record chick behavior, particularly interactions with neighboring adults. Adoption and infanticide occurred mostly in zones of high nest density and during years of high breeding success. The chicks adopted were 20–40 days of age, the age at which they acquire mobility and parents still experience a certain inability to recognize them. Adopted chicks were slightly younger than chicks in the broods into which they were adopted. In most cases, adoptees were younger than their siblings in their natal broods. We also recorded short-term (lasting only a few hours) alloparental care for chicks older than 40 days. When we excluded parents from nests and their chicks were attacked, it was female neighbors that physically attacked them, whereas males were more prone to brood or preen them; therefore, the sex with certainty of parenthood was more prone to practice infanticide, presumably to avoid adoption. The lack of aggressiveness by males might be due to the possibility of paternity, given the occurrence of extra-pair copulations in this species.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Chronic stress in infancy fails to affect body size and immune response of adult female blue-footed boobies or their offspring
- Author
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Hugh Drummond, Alejandra Núñez-de la Mora, and María Cristina Carmona-Isunza
- Subjects
Natural selection ,biology ,Ecology ,Offspring ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Physiology ,Booby ,biology.organism_classification ,Nest ,Survivorship curve ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Chronic stress ,Reproduction ,Sula nebouxii ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,media_common - Abstract
Experiments on birds, fish and mammals have shown that adverse conditions during infancy can produce diverse long-term and delayed deficits during adulthood, prejudicing both the individual and its offspring. Natural selection should prepare animals to cope with adversity of the type, magnitude and timing that commonly occur in their natural habitat, but very little is known about such evolved developmental buffering against natural ‘poor starts’ in life. In two-chick broods of the blue-footed booby Sula nebouxii, the junior (younger) chick usually experiences aggressive subordination, reduced nutrition and growth and elevated circulating corticosterone. To test whether this poor start produces long-term, delayed or intergenerational deficits in body size, body condition or cell-mediated immune response, we measured 3–8 yr old female breeders banded as chicks, and their infant offspring. Results failed to support our predictions. Compared to former seniors and former singletons (solitary nestlings), former juniors showed no deficit in cell-mediated immune response at any age. They showed an 8.04% deficit in body condition at age 4–6 yr but this deficit disappeared completely by age 7–8 yr. Furthermore, their offspring showed no deficits in body size, body condition or immune response. Junior chicks are affected by their poor start, but their developmental resilience, also confirmed by studies of post-fledging survivorship, recruitment, natal dispersal, aggressive nest defense and reproduction, is evidence of evolved developmental buffering against predictable adversity during infancy.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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