Many animals use photoperiod cues to synchronize reproduction with environmental conditions and thereby improve their reproductive success. The circadian clock, which creates endogenous behavioral and physiological rhythms typically entrained to photoperiod, is well characterized at the molecular level. Recent work provided evidence for an association between Clock poly-Q length polymorphism and latitude and, within a population, an association with the date of laying and the length of the incubation period. Despite relatively high overall breeding synchrony, the timing of clutch initiation has a large impact on the fitness of swallows in the genus Tachycineta. We compared length polymorphism in the Clock poly-Q region among five populations from five different Tachycineta species that breed across a hemisphere-wide latitudinal gradient (Fig. 1). Clock poly-Q variation was not associated with latitude; however, there was an association between Clock poly-Q allele diversity and the degree of clutch size decline within breeding seasons. We did not find evidence for an association between Clock poly-Q variation and date of clutch initiation in for any of the five Tachycineta species, nor did we found a relationship between incubation duration and Clock genotype. Thus, there is no general association between latitude, breeding phenology, and Clock polymorphism in this clade of closely related birds.Figure 1Photos of Tachycineta swallows that were used in this study: A) T. bicolor from Ithaca, New York, B) T. leucorrhoa from Chascomús, Argentina, C) T. albilinea from Hill Bank, Belize, D) T. meyeni from Puerto Varas, Chile, and E) T. thalassina from Mono Lake, California, Photographers: B: Valentina Ferretti; A, C-E: David Winkler.
In a study of almost 16 000 nest records from seven swallow species across the entire Western Hemisphere, clutch sizes decline with relative laying date in each population, but the slope of this decline grows steeper with increasing distance from the equator. Late-laying birds at all latitudes lay clutches of similar sizes, suggesting that latitudinal differences may be driven primarily by earlier-laying birds. Focused comparisons of site-years in North America with qualitatively different food availability indicate that food supply significantly affects mean clutch size but not the clutch size-lay date regression. Other studies on the seasonality of swallow food also indicate that steeper clutch size-lay date declines in the North are not caused by steeper earlier food peaks there. The distribution of lay dates grows increasingly right-skewed with increasing latitude. This variation in lay-date distributions could be due to the predominance of higher quality, early-laying (and large-clutched) individuals among populations at higher latitudes, resulting from latitudinal variation in mortality rates and the intensity of sexual selection. Our results underscore the importance of studying clutch size and lay date in tandem and suggest new research into the causes of their joint geographic variation.
A combination of infrared cameras and plasticine eggs were used to identify potential nest predators of Flightless Steamer-Ducks (Tachyeres pteneres) and Flying Steamer-Ducks (T. patachonicus) and to evaluate the relative efficacy of these methods for identifying predators. Cameras were set up at 31 artificial nests with plasticine eggs and at four Flightless and two Flying steamer-duck nests. Two avian predators, Chimango Caracara (Milvago chimango) and Southern Crested Caracara (Caracara plancus), and two mammalian predators, Fuegian Culpeo fox (Pseudalopex culpaeus lycoides) and American mink (Neovison vison), were identified as depredating artificial nests from photos. Active Flightless and Flying steamer-duck nests were found only on islets, and from the photos the Chimango and Southern Crested caracaras were identified as nest predators. Mammalian predators were not photographed on islets (neither on artificial nor natural nests). Though the potential predator community at Lapataia Bay was small, there were considerable similarities in physical evidence and marks left at nests, especially within avian predators. Also, depredated nests were sometimes revisited by other predators and these multi-predator visits sometimes caused changes to the appearance of the depredated nest following departure of the initial predator. The cameras provided an objective method for definitive identification of nest predators.
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ABSTRACT. Geographic patterns of variation in life-history traits have puzzled researchers for decades. However, the widely accepted idea that mating systems exhibit a tropical-temperate latitudinal trend, with extra-pair mating systems being the norm among temperate species and genetic monogamy the norm among tropical species, is supported by sparse data, particularly for birds breeding in the tropics and even more so for birds that breed in the southern hemisphere temperate zone. Our objective was to examine the genetic mating system of Chilean Swallows (Tachycineta meyeni) breeding at 54°S in Tierra del Fuego, Argentina. From 2006 to 2009, we examined the paternity of young in 52 broods. Contrary to predictions based on their congeners that breed at equivalent latitudes in the northern hemisphere, Chilean Swallows in our study had low rates of extra-pair paternity (EPP), with 13.5% of nests (N = 52) having at least one extra-pair young and 6.8% of all nestlings (N = 161) fathered by extra-pair males. These rates are also lower than those reported for species of Tachycineta swallows that breed at tropical latitudes. We found no support for a tropical-south temperate latitudinal cline in EPP rates. The highly unpredictable weather of the island of Tierra del Fuego might be influencing parental investment at this site; small clutch sizes and low EPP rates are expected if biparental attention is crucial for chick survival and reproductive success for these aerial insectivores. We argue that the sparse sampling of mating systems in birds worldwide may have contributed to a misapprehension of a global pattern. More studies of tropical and south-temperate systems are needed to build on theories based on a wider set of taxa.
RESUMEN. Paternidad extra-pareja en una población de Golondrina Patagónica a los 54 grados surLos patrones de variación geográficos en rasgos de historias de vida han intrigado a los investigadores por décadas. Sin embargo, la idea ampliamente aceptada que establece que los sistemas de apareamiento presentan una tendencia latitudinal del trópico a las latitudes templadas, con sistemas de apareamiento extra-pareja siendo la norma en las especies templadas, y la monogamia genética la norma entre especies tropicales, se apoya en muy pocos datos; en especial para especies de aves que se reproducen en el trópico, y más aun para aquellas de la zona templada del hemisferio sur. Nuestro objetivo fue estudiar el sistema genético de apareamiento de la golondrina Patagónica Tachycineta meyeni a los 54°S en Tierra del Fuego, Argentina. Entre 2006-2009 examinamos la paternidad de los polluelos de 52 nidadas. Contrario a nuestras predicciones basadas en los congéneres que se reproducen en latitudes equivalentes del hemisferio norte, en nuestro estudio las golondrinas Patagónicas tienen tasas muy bajas de paternidad extra-pareja con 13.5% de nidos con por lo menos un polluelo extra-pareja (N = 52) y 6.8% de polluelos extra-pareja en la población (N = 161). Estas tasas son más bajas que las encontradas en especie...
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