Ecology and Evolution
2024
14
2
e11021
https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.11021
2045-7758
Amazonia, Rynchops niger, thermal ecology, time- lapse
Birds nesting on riverine beaches are exposed to large temperature fluctuations, while changing water levels pose flooding risks. We used miniature temperature loggers (iButtons®) placed in nests and on the beach surface combined with time-lapse photography to study incubation behaviour in the black skimmer (Rynchops niger) on the Manu River, Peru. Since the species exhibits sexual size dimorphism, we could identify partner switches in images and the contribution to incubation effort by each pair member. Results of the study documented that nest temperature was less affected by ambient temperature and fluctuated less than the surroundings. Despite shorter incubation bouts at midday, black skimmers maintained a close to constant presence at the nest by more frequent nest exchanges. In fact, while female black skimmers generally incubated more and for longer than males, pairs shared incubation most consistently during the hottest part of the day. Incubation probability decreased around dusk, a peak foraging time for the species and a time when beach temperature overlapped with nest temperature. A biparental incubation strategy across the diel cycle appears to allow black skimmers breeding at the Manu River to incubate in challenging thermal conditions, but further studies are needed to determine proximity to thermal limits.
© 2024 Los Autores. Publicado por John Wiley & Sons Ltd bajo Licencia Creative Commons Atribución 4.0 Internacional.
Austad Martin, Sand Sæbø Jørgen, Steen Ronny, Goodenough Katharine S., Davenport Lisa, Haugaasen Torbjørn
John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Maidstone, Reino Unido
Inglés
Articulo de revista academica