Erikstad Kjell Einar, Tveraa Torkild
Norwegian Institute for Nature Research, Tromsø Museum, University of Tromsø, N-9006, Tromsø, Norway.
Department of Ecology/Zoology, University of Tromsø, N-9037, Tromsø, Norway.
Oecologia. 1995 Aug;103(3):270-274. doi: 10.1007/BF00328614.
We examined the effect of natural clutch size on the cost of incubation in a population of common eiders Somateria mollissima nesting in Tromsø, northern Norway. The body condition of females at day 5 in the incubation period was not related to clutch size (3-6 eggs), but females incubating large clutches lost more mass and had a lower body condition at day 20 in the incubation period than females incubating small clutches. Females incubating large clutches had a slightly shorter incubation period and a lower egg predation rate. The results do not support the hypothesis that the female's ability to produce eggs is the only ultimate control of clutch size in eider. Instead the results suggest that there may be an interaction between the allocation of body reserves to eggs and incubation, and that females producing large clutches allocate more of their body reserves to incubation than females producing small clutches, in order to shorten the incubation period and to minimise the risk of predation on eggs.
我们研究了自然窝卵数对在挪威北部特罗姆瑟筑巢的普通绒鸭种群孵卵成本的影响。孵化期第5天雌性个体的身体状况与窝卵数(3 - 6枚卵)无关,但与孵化小窝卵数的雌性相比,孵化大窝卵数的雌性在孵化期第20天体重减轻更多,身体状况更差。孵化大窝卵数的雌性孵化期略短,卵被捕食率更低。这些结果并不支持雌性产卵能力是绒鸭窝卵数唯一最终控制因素的假设。相反,结果表明在用于产卵和孵卵的身体储备分配之间可能存在相互作用,并且与孵化小窝卵数的雌性相比,孵化大窝卵数的雌性会将更多身体储备用于孵卵,以缩短孵化期并将卵被捕食的风险降至最低。