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Latitudinal variation in clutch size–lay date regressions in Tachycineta swallows: effects of food supply or demography?
Author(s) -
Winkler David W.,
Ringelman Kevin M.,
Dunn Peter O.,
Whittingham Linda,
Hussell David J. T.,
Clark Robert G.,
Dawson Russell D.,
Johnson L. Scott,
Rose Alexandra,
Austin Suzanne H.,
Robinson W. Douglas,
Lombardo Michael P.,
Thorpe Patrick A.,
Shutler Dave,
Robertson Raleigh J.,
Stager Maria,
Leonard Marty,
Horn Andrew G.,
Dickinson Janis,
Ferretti Valentina,
Massoni Viviana,
Bulit Florencia,
Reboreda Juan C.,
Liljesthröm Marcela,
Quiroga Martín,
Rakhimberdiev Eldar,
Ardia Daniel R.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
ecography
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.973
H-Index - 128
eISSN - 1600-0587
pISSN - 0906-7590
DOI - 10.1111/j.1600-0587.2013.00458.x
Subject(s) - avian clutch size , latitude , ecology , biology , population , seasonality , nest (protein structural motif) , clutch , food supply , reproduction , geography , demography , biochemistry , physics , geodesy , thermodynamics , agricultural science , sociology
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.

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