Reassessing breeding investment in birds: class-wide analysis of clutch volume reveals a single outlying family.

Reproductive investment is typically considered in terms of size and number of propagules produced. Compared with a thorough understanding of the overall patterns and ecological correlates of avian clutch size, egg size has received less attention and the total effort invested in laying a clutch of...

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Main Authors: David M Watson, Susan E Anderson, Valerie Olson, Institute for Land, Water and Society
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4310587?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-5861e21d1bac45f0966b755693748b4b2020-11-25T02:40:11ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-01101e011767810.1371/journal.pone.0117678Reassessing breeding investment in birds: class-wide analysis of clutch volume reveals a single outlying family.David M WatsonSusan E AndersonValerie OlsonInstitute for Land, Water and SocietyReproductive investment is typically considered in terms of size and number of propagules produced. Compared with a thorough understanding of the overall patterns and ecological correlates of avian clutch size, egg size has received less attention and the total effort invested in laying a clutch of eggs is rarely considered. We used clutch volume as an alternative estimate of reproductive investment and present the first class-level analysis of clutch volume in birds using 1,364 randomly-selected species in 204 families. The relationship between body mass and egg volume was very strong (r2 = 0.946), validating previous studies identifying four families (Apterygidae, Pelecanoidiididae, Sternidae and Dromadidiae) with disproportionately large eggs. Clutch volume was also closely related to body mass (r2 = 0.909) and all but one of the taxa with disproportionately large eggs conformed to the overall relationship, their greater egg dimensions compensated by diminished clutch size. The only family which departed significantly from the relationship between body mass and clutch volume was the mound builders (Megapodiidae)-the only group of birds that do not rely on body heat for incubation. Although previously known for laying large clutches of large eggs containing disproportionately large yolks, the remarkable investment of megapodes in reproduction (more than seven times greater than other birds of comparable mass) has been hitherto overlooked. We consider the evolutionary basis and ecological implications of this finding, suggesting that energetic costs associated with incubation act as an upper limit on reproductive output of other birds. We recommend clutch volume as a sensitive, fine-grained measure of reproductive effort for research at a wide range of scales and advocate further analysis of ecological correlates of clutch volume in birds and amniotes generally.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4310587?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author David M Watson
Susan E Anderson
Valerie Olson
Institute for Land, Water and Society
spellingShingle David M Watson
Susan E Anderson
Valerie Olson
Institute for Land, Water and Society
Reassessing breeding investment in birds: class-wide analysis of clutch volume reveals a single outlying family.
PLoS ONE
author_facet David M Watson
Susan E Anderson
Valerie Olson
Institute for Land, Water and Society
author_sort David M Watson
title Reassessing breeding investment in birds: class-wide analysis of clutch volume reveals a single outlying family.
title_short Reassessing breeding investment in birds: class-wide analysis of clutch volume reveals a single outlying family.
title_full Reassessing breeding investment in birds: class-wide analysis of clutch volume reveals a single outlying family.
title_fullStr Reassessing breeding investment in birds: class-wide analysis of clutch volume reveals a single outlying family.
title_full_unstemmed Reassessing breeding investment in birds: class-wide analysis of clutch volume reveals a single outlying family.
title_sort reassessing breeding investment in birds: class-wide analysis of clutch volume reveals a single outlying family.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Reproductive investment is typically considered in terms of size and number of propagules produced. Compared with a thorough understanding of the overall patterns and ecological correlates of avian clutch size, egg size has received less attention and the total effort invested in laying a clutch of eggs is rarely considered. We used clutch volume as an alternative estimate of reproductive investment and present the first class-level analysis of clutch volume in birds using 1,364 randomly-selected species in 204 families. The relationship between body mass and egg volume was very strong (r2 = 0.946), validating previous studies identifying four families (Apterygidae, Pelecanoidiididae, Sternidae and Dromadidiae) with disproportionately large eggs. Clutch volume was also closely related to body mass (r2 = 0.909) and all but one of the taxa with disproportionately large eggs conformed to the overall relationship, their greater egg dimensions compensated by diminished clutch size. The only family which departed significantly from the relationship between body mass and clutch volume was the mound builders (Megapodiidae)-the only group of birds that do not rely on body heat for incubation. Although previously known for laying large clutches of large eggs containing disproportionately large yolks, the remarkable investment of megapodes in reproduction (more than seven times greater than other birds of comparable mass) has been hitherto overlooked. We consider the evolutionary basis and ecological implications of this finding, suggesting that energetic costs associated with incubation act as an upper limit on reproductive output of other birds. We recommend clutch volume as a sensitive, fine-grained measure of reproductive effort for research at a wide range of scales and advocate further analysis of ecological correlates of clutch volume in birds and amniotes generally.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4310587?pdf=render
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