2021
DOI: 10.1111/jav.02781
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Deconstructing incubation behaviour in response to ambient temperature over different timescales

Abstract: Avian embryos need a stable thermal environment to develop optimally, while incubating females need to allocate time to self‐maintenance off the nest. In species with female‐only incubation, eggs are exposed to ambient temperatures that usually cool them down during female absences. The lower the ambient temperature the sooner females should return to re‐warm the eggs. When incubation constraints ease at increasing ambient temperatures, females respond by increasing either incubation effort or self‐maintenance… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(13 citation statements)
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References 83 publications
(176 reference statements)
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“…However, despite bi-parental care, we observed a stronger effect of maternal than paternal microbiomes on chick gut microbiomes (see also [27]). Females spend more time than males during nest building [42, 76], egg laying [7779], incubation [8082], and brooding [42, 83, 84], which could lead to a maternally biased shedding of microbes that can be acquired by the chicks. Indirect transfer of maternal microbes via nest environment has also been shown in Zebra finch chicks ( Taeniopygia guttata ) [15].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, despite bi-parental care, we observed a stronger effect of maternal than paternal microbiomes on chick gut microbiomes (see also [27]). Females spend more time than males during nest building [42, 76], egg laying [7779], incubation [8082], and brooding [42, 83, 84], which could lead to a maternally biased shedding of microbes that can be acquired by the chicks. Indirect transfer of maternal microbes via nest environment has also been shown in Zebra finch chicks ( Taeniopygia guttata ) [15].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Chick gut microbiome convergence towards nest microbiome suggests that the nest environment plays an important role in gut microbiome colonization and the structuring of the microbiome community, likely leading to the brood effect observed in altricial birds. Female tits spend longer time than males in the nest‐box during nest building (Mainwaring, 2017; Perrins, 1979), egg laying (Diez‐Méndez, Sanz, & Barba, 2021; Lord et al, 2011; Pendlebury & Bryant, 2005), incubation (Bambini et al, 2019; Diez‐Méndez, Cooper, et al, 2021; Nilsson, 2000) and brooding periods (Andreasson et al, 2016; Perrins, 1979; Rodríguez & Barba, 2016). These behaviours would further result in indirect maternal‐biased transfer of microbes due to increased amount of female contact with nest material.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Female tits spend longer time than males in the nest-box during nest building (Mainwaring, 2017;Perrins, 1979), egg laying Lord et al, 2011;Pendlebury & Bryant, 2005), incubation (Bambini et al, 2019;Diez-Méndez, Cooper, et al, 2021;Nilsson, 2000) and brooding periods (Andreasson et al, 2016;Perrins, 1979;Rodríguez & Barba, 2016). These behaviours would further result in indirect maternal-biased transfer of microbes due to increased amount of female contact with nest material.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our study results come with some caveats. Because we report correlative data from wild birds, we cannot assess whether chronotype was affected by the local microenvironment, either directly or via differences in individual quality (Diez-Méndez, Cooper, et al, 2021;Maury et al, 2020). We have recorded female chronotype only during one life-cycle stage, incubation, similar to earlier studies on males that considered only courtship (Murphy et al, 2008).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%