2022
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0275106
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The breeding biology of erect-crested penguins, Eudyptes sclateri: Hormones, behavior, obligate brood reduction and conservation

Abstract: Erect-crested penguins are the least studied of all penguins. They breed on two isolated subantarctic island groups, the Antipodes and Bounty Islands. Sporadic nest counts indicate a dramatic decline in numbers of erect-crested penguins over the last 50 years. Here we present data from a study undertaken in 1998 on the breeding biology, behavior and hormones of erect-crested penguins. It represents, even today, by far the most detailed data available on this species. The penguins exhibited extreme reversed egg… Show more

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“…Within Brown kiwi ( A. mantelli ) we identified no differences among the first and second clutch, or the first and second egg, or sex of the embryo in egg size, chick hatch mass, or chick development time. This suggests that kiwi, unlike species of crested penguins (Davis et al 2022), gulls (Saino et al 2010), or wrens (Bowers et al 2014), have not evolved to apply even subtle brood reduction or sex-specific nutritional allocation strategies to their offspring. Instead, hens appear to invest nutritional resources equally in all their offspring, regardless of time of year, and regardless of the short duration between the first and second egg (see Fuller 1990).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Within Brown kiwi ( A. mantelli ) we identified no differences among the first and second clutch, or the first and second egg, or sex of the embryo in egg size, chick hatch mass, or chick development time. This suggests that kiwi, unlike species of crested penguins (Davis et al 2022), gulls (Saino et al 2010), or wrens (Bowers et al 2014), have not evolved to apply even subtle brood reduction or sex-specific nutritional allocation strategies to their offspring. Instead, hens appear to invest nutritional resources equally in all their offspring, regardless of time of year, and regardless of the short duration between the first and second egg (see Fuller 1990).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%