Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Parental behaviour of Spanish Imperial Eagles Aquila adalberti : sexual differences in a moderately dimorphic raptor

2007; Taylor & Francis; Volume: 54; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1080/00063650709461462

ISSN

1944-6705

Autores

Antoni Margalida, Luis Mariano González, Roberto Sánchez, Javier Oria, Luis Felipe Prada‐Sarmiento,

Tópico(s)

Plant and animal studies

Resumo

Abstract Capsule The sexes make significantly different contributions in the tasks of nest-building, incubation and food provisioning to chicks. Aims To determine the division of parental activities during breeding (nest-building, incubation, brooding, food provisioning and feeding). Methods Between 1991 and 1998 focal observations were made at nests using 20–60× telescopes. During the incubation period, 11 pairs were studied involving a total of 2812 observation hours over 269 days. During the chick-rearing period, seven pairs were studied involving a total of 5499 observation hours spread over 503 days. The birds were sexed and identified individually on the basis of size, position during copulation, vocalization and plumage differences. Results Significant differences were found between the sexes in parental behaviour. Males scarcely participated in incubation and contributed significantly more than the females only in food provisioning, both during incubation (food transfers to feed the female) and during chick-rearing (to feed the chicks). Females were responsible for most of the incubation, nest-building (during incubation and chick-rearing), brooding, shading and feeding of chicks. Nest attendance by females decreased over time. In both sexes, food provisioning increased with brood size. Conclusion Intersexual differences are discussed in the context of the reversed sexual size dimorphism and parental investment strategies. We suggest that in Spanish Imperial Eagles reversed sexual size dimorphism is best explained by the prey capture difficulty hypothesis, than by parental role division during reproduction. Keywords: AquilaSpanish Imperial Eagle

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