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Reproductive traits of marine terns (Sternidae): evidence for food limitation in the tropics?
Abstract
Marine terns breed between 80°N and 70°S, making them a suitable group for examining links between latitude and reproductive traits. We investigated such traits for 34 taxa in seven genera, using analyses of residuals to correct for effects of e.g. female body mass and egg mass on other life history traits. Both tree- and K-means clustering, based on four traits excluding chick provisioning mode, identified two groups of terns — those that breed on tropical oceanic islands and those that breed along mainland coasts and at temperate islands (>40° from the Equator). Among mainland terns, there is a tendency for reduced clutch investment at low latitudes both between and within species. There is no interspecific latitudinal variation in incubation or fledging period of these terns, but intraspecific variation in fledging period (longer in the tropics) has been reported for one species. Tropical island terns, which mostly breed at sites lacking native ground predators, show extreme clutch reduction and lay a single, relatively large egg that has a long incubation period. Fledging periods are also long, despite the fact that these are the only terns to use multiple prey loading or regurgitation to feed their chicks. These patterns are interpreted as responses to low food availability stemming from a combination of low oceanic productivity, high bird densities because of breeding space limitation and localised prey depletion associated with central place foraging.
(Ostrich: 2003 74(1&2): 110–116)
(Ostrich: 2003 74(1&2): 110–116)