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Brood dispersal and multiple central place foraging by Lapland longspur parents
Authors:Robert L. McLaughlin  Robert D. Montgomerie
Affiliation:(1) Department of Biology, Queen's University, K7L 3N6 Kingston, Ontario, Canada;(2) Present address: Department of Biology, McGill University, 1205 Ave. Dr. Penfield, H3A 1B1 Montreal, P. Q, Canada
Abstract:Summary Lapland longspur chicks continued to be fed by their parents for 2 weeks after nest departure. Shortly after they left the nest, broods were divided evenly into two units each tended by a single parent. Female-tended brood units dispersed away from the nest at a faster average distance per day than those tended by males. The distance between offspring within a brood unit also increased as chicks got older. For the first 8–10 d after nest departure, parents were multiple central place foragers, making 1–8 foraging trips away from each dispersed chick (i.e. the central place) before moving on to feed another chick in a similar fashion. During the final 5–7 d before independence, chicks were quite mobile and followed parents on their foraging bouts. A simulation model shows that brood dispersal reduced total parental travel time per chick, primarily because each chick moved closer to a foraging site. By comparing models for a variety of brood division and foraging itinerary scenarios, we also show that multiple central place foraging by parents visiting different, separated brood units is less energetically expensive than other reasonable alternatives.Although brood dispersal is usually considered to be an adaptation for avoiding predation, it can also help parents reduce the energetic costs of parental care.
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