Data di Pubblicazione:
2018
Abstract:
Throughout the Western World, huge numbers of people regularly supply food for
wild birds. However, evidence of negative impacts of winter feeding on future reproduction
has highlighted a need to improve understanding of the underlying mechanisms
shaping avian responses to supplementary food. Here, we test the possibility
that carry-over
effects are mediated via their impact on the phenotypes of breeding
birds, either by influencing the phenotypic structure of populations through changes
in winter survival and/or by more direct effects on the condition of breeding birds.
Using a landscape-scale
3-year
study of blue tits (Cyanistes caeruleus), we demonstrate
the importance of nutritional composition of supplementary food in determining
carry-over
effect outcomes. We show that breeding populations which had
access to vitamin E-rich
foods during the previous winter were comprised of
individuals
with reduced feather carotenoid concentrations, indicative of lower
pre-feeding phenotypic condition, compared to fat-fed
and unfed populations. This
suggests that supplementary feeding in winter can result in altered population
phenotypic
structure at the time of breeding, perhaps by enhancing survival and
recruitment
of lower quality individuals. However, supplementation of a fat-rich
diet
during winter was detrimental to the oxidative state of breeding birds, with these
phenotypic differences ultimately found to impact upon reproductive success. Our
findings demonstrate the complex nature by which supplementary feeding can influence
wild bird populations.
Tipologia CRIS:
03A-Articolo su Rivista
Keywords:
antioxidant, carotenoid-based plumage, carry-over effect, life history trade-off, oxidative
stress, urban
Elenco autori:
Plummer, Kate E.; Bearhop, Stuart; Leech, David I.; Chamberlain, Dan E.; Blount, Jonathan D.
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