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Title
Life-history tradeoffs revealed by seasonal declines in reproductive traits of Arctic-breeding shorebirds
Author(s)
Weiser, Emily L.;Brown, Stephen C.;Lanctot, Richard B.;Gates, H. River;Abraham, Kenneth F.;Bentzen, Rebecca L.;Bêty, Joël;Boldenow, Megan L.;Brook, Rodney W.;Donnelly, Tyrone F.;English, Willow B.;Flemming, Scott A.;Franks, Samantha E.;Gilchrist, H. Grant;Giroux, Marie-Andrée;Johnson, Andrew;Kennedy, Lisa V.;Koloski, Laura;Kwon, Eunbi;Lamarre, Jean-François;Lank, David B.;Lecomte, Nicolas;Liebezeit, Joseph R.;McKinnon, Laura;Nol, Erica;Perz, Johanna;Rausch, Jennie;Robards, Martin;Saalfeld, Sarah T.;Senner, Nathan R.;Smith, Paul A.;Soloviev, Mikhail;Solovyeva, Diana;H.Ward, David;Woodard, Paul F.;Sandercock, Brett K.
Published
2018
Publisher
Journal of Avian Biology
Published Version DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/jav.01531
Abstract
Seasonal declines in breeding performance are widespread in wild animals, resulting from temporal changes in environmental conditions or from individual variation. Seasonal declines might drive selection for early breeding, with implications for other stages of the annual cycle. Alternatively, selection on the phenology of nonbreeding stages could constrain timing of the breeding season and lead to seasonal changes in reproductive performance. We studied 25 taxa of migratory shorebirds (including five subspecies) at 16 arctic sites in Russia, Alaska, and Canada. We investigated seasonal changes in four reproductive traits, and developed a novel Bayesian risk-partitioning model of daily nest survival to examine seasonal trends in two causes of nest failure. We found strong seasonal declines in reproductive traits for a subset of species. The probability of laying a full four-egg clutch declined by 8–78% in 12 of 25 taxa tested, daily nest survival rates declined by 1–12% in eight of 22 taxa, incubation duration declined by 2.0–2.5% in two of seven taxa, and mean egg volume declined by 5% in one of 15 taxa. Temporal changes were not fully explained by individual variation. Across all species, the proportion of failed nests that were depredated declined over the season from 0.98 to 0.60, while the proportion abandoned increased from 0.01 to 0.35 and drove the seasonal declines in nest survival. An increase in abandonment of late nests is consistent with a life-history tradeoff whereby either adult mortality increased or adults deserted the breeding attempt to maximize adult survival. In turn, seasonal declines in clutch size and incubation duration might be adaptive to hasten hatching of later nests. In other species of shorebirds, we found no seasonal patterns in breeding performance, suggesting that some species are not subject to selective pressure for early breeding. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
Keywords
clutch size;daily nest survival;egg volume;incubation duration;reproductive success;seasonality;waders

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