Begging and food distribution in crimson rosella (Platycercus elegans) broods: why don't hungry chicks beg more?


Autoria(s): Krebs, EA
Contribuinte(s)

T. Czeschlik

Data(s)

01/01/2001

Resumo

Altricial nestlings solicit food by begging and engaging in scramble competition. Solicitation displays can thus signal both hunger and competitive ability. I examined nestling solicitation and parental responses in crimson rosellas (Platycercus elegans), a species in which parents engage in complex patterns of food allocation and appear to control the distribution of food. By manipulating the hunger of individual chicks and entire broods, I assessed how chick behaviours and parental food allocation varied with hatching rank, level of hunger, and intensity of nestling competition. Last-hatched chicks begged more than first-hatched chicks irrespective of individual hunger levels. The two parents combined fed individually hungry chicks more, but mothers and fathers varied in their responses to begging chicks: fathers fed last-hatched chicks in proportion to their begging intensity, whereas mothers fed chicks equally. Since fathers generally allocate more food to first-hatched chicks, fathers appear to use begging rates to adjust food allocation to non-preferred chicks within the brood. When I manipulated brood hunger levels, begging rates increased for first- and last-hatched chicks suggesting that chick begging rates are sensitive to the level of competition. This study shows that begging by rosella chicks does not correlate with hunger in a straightforward way and that the primary patterns of food allocation by parents art: not influenced by chick begging. Thus the benefits of increased begging may be limited for nestlings in this species.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:60512

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Springer-Verlag

Palavras-Chave #Behavioral Sciences #Ecology #Zoology #Parrots #Parent-offspring Conflict #Sibling Competition #Begging #Food Allocation #Hatching Asynchrony #Headed Blackbird Nestlings #Ficedula-hypoleuca #Pied Flycatcher #Tree Swallows #Need #Behavior #Signals #Choice #C1 #270599 Zoology not elsewhere classified #780105 Biological sciences
Tipo

Journal Article