2007
DOI: 10.1650/8241.1
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Isotopic Evidence for Sources of Nutrients Allocated to Clutch Formation by Harlequin Ducks

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Cited by 28 publications
(25 citation statements)
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“…Thus, while brent geese invest their body reserves into eggs and therefore have to forage extensively during incubation, king eiders may use exogenous resources for egg formation in order to retain body reserves for incubation (Bond et al 2007;Gorman et al 2008). As a consequence, there is potential for both endogenous and exogenous nutrient sources to be limiting to king eider reproduction.…”
Section: Do Eiders Retain Body Reserves For Incubation?mentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Thus, while brent geese invest their body reserves into eggs and therefore have to forage extensively during incubation, king eiders may use exogenous resources for egg formation in order to retain body reserves for incubation (Bond et al 2007;Gorman et al 2008). As a consequence, there is potential for both endogenous and exogenous nutrient sources to be limiting to king eider reproduction.…”
Section: Do Eiders Retain Body Reserves For Incubation?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Where along that continuum a species falls depends on the general life history of the species as well as on the resource availability at the place and time of reproduction (Bonnet et al 1998;Houston et al 2007;Jönsson 1997). Many recent studies have used stable isotope applications to trace the origin of nutrients used for reproduction, in insects (O'Brien et al 2000(O'Brien et al , 2005, fish (Jardine et al 2008), reptiles (Warner et al 2008), mammals (Dalerum et al 2007), and especially in migratory birds (Bond et al 2007; Morrison and Hobson 2004;Schmutz et al 2006). The techniques used to quantify the allocation of nutrients via isotopic mixing models have advanced rapidly in the recent past (Moore and Semmens 2008;Parnell 2008;Phillips et al 2005).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Reproductive problems and low productivity have been documented for both species (Grand et al, 2002;Rojek, 2008). In Steller's and spectacled eiders, the relative importance of marine and terrestrial nutrients for reproduction is unknown, but there is evidence to suggest that some sea duck species acquire nutrients for successful breeding from both the terrestrial nesting and marine staging grounds (Bond et al, 2007;Sénéchal et al, 2011). A better understanding of diet sources and timing of nutrient acquisition for these eiders will provide information to help identify important pre-breeding habitats of threatened eider populations in Alaska.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We thus reject the hypothesis that common eiders are pure capital laying birds (Parker and Holm 1990;Meijer and Drent 1999). Like other well-studied bird species (e.g., Gauthier et al 2003;Hobson et al 2004Hobson et al , 2005Bond et al 2007;Gorman et al 2008), and several other organisms (Casas et al 2005;Stephens et al 2009), eiders in this population use a mixed capital-income breeding strategy. Relying exclusively on stored resources is likely non-adaptive in arctic-nesting eiders.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 50%
“…Given that mixed strategies are diYcult to quantify, it is especially challenging to compare animals studied using diVerent methods. Based on detailed stable isotope studies, Greater snow geese (Chen caerulescens atlantica; Gauthier et al 2003) and Barrow's goldeneye (Bucephala islandica; Hobson et al 2005) are the waterfowl species closest to the capital end of the capital-income continuum, while redhead (Aythya americana; Hobson et al 2004) and harlequin ducks (Histrionicus histrionicus; Bond et al 2007) were found to be mostly income layers. Considering egg formation and incubation strategies of arctic-nesting common eiders (which fast during the entire incubation; Bottitta et al 2003), it appears that they remain the most extreme known capital breeders among studied Xying birds.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%