Applied Ornithology Unit, Division of Environmental and Evolutionary Biology, Graham Kerr Building, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK G12 8QQ.
Trends Ecol Evol. 1997 Jul;12(7):270-4. doi: 10.1016/s0169-5347(97)01094-x.
Fifty years ago David Lack put forward a key hypothesis in life-history theory: that avian clutch is ultimately determined by the number of young that parents can provide with food. Since then, a plethora of brood manipulations has shown that birds can rear more young than the number of eggs they lay, and prompted a search for negative effects of increased effort on future reproduction. However, recent studies have shown that the demands of laying and incubating eggs generally omitted from experiments, could affect parental fitness. Lack's hypothesis, and the tests of its validity, need to be extended to encompass the full demands of producing and rearing the brood.
五十年前,大卫·拉克(David Lack)在其生命史理论中提出了一个关键假设:鸟类的产卵数最终取决于亲鸟能够为幼鸟提供食物的数量。此后,大量的育雏操作表明,鸟类可以养育出比产卵数更多的幼鸟,并促使人们寻找增加努力对未来繁殖的负面影响。然而,最近的研究表明,实验中通常忽略了产卵和孵化卵的需求,这可能会影响亲鸟的适应度。因此,需要将拉克的假设及其有效性的检验扩展到包括产生和养育雏鸟的全部需求。