Data di Pubblicazione:
2013
Abstract:
Supplementation of food to wild birds occurs on an enormous scale worldwide, and is often cited as an
exemplar of beneficial human-wildlife interaction. Recently it has been speculated that winter feeding could
have negative consequences for future reproduction, for example by enabling low quality individuals to
recruit into breeding populations. However, evidence that winter feeding has deleterious impacts on
reproductive success is lacking. Here, in a landscape-scale study of blue tits (Cyanistes caeruleus) across
multiple years, we show that winter food supplementation reduced breeding performance the following
spring. Compared to unfed populations, winter-fed birds produced offspring that weighed less, were
smaller, and had lower survival. This impairment was observed in parents that had received fat only, or in
combination with vitamin E, suggesting some generality in the mechanism by which supplementary feeding
affected reproduction. Our results highlight the potential for deleterious population-level consequences of
winter food supplementation on wild birds.
Tipologia CRIS:
03A-Articolo su Rivista
Elenco autori:
Plummer K.E.; S. Bearhop; D.I. Leech; D.E. Chamberlain; J.D. Blount
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