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Oecologia. 1997 Mar;110(1):50-59. doi: 10.1007/s004420050132.

Incubation capacity and clutch size determination in two calidrine sandpipers: a test of the four-egg threshold.

Oecologia

Brett K Sandercock

Affiliations

  1. Department of Biological Sciences, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada V5A 1S6 fax: (604)-291-3496; e-mail: [email protected], , , , , , CA.

PMID: 28307468 DOI: 10.1007/s004420050132

Abstract

Several groups of vertebrate taxa, including shorebirds, are unusual in that they produce a fixed number of offspring. The aim of this study was to examine whether the incubation capacity of western sandpipers (Calidris mauri) and semipalmated sandpipers (C. pusilla) limits their maximum clutch size to four eggs. Experimental enlargement of clutch size had no effect on rates of nest abandonment, nest attendance or loss of body mass by incubating sandpipers. The duration of incubation was significantly longer for enlarged five-egg nests, and there were trends towards increased partial clutch loss and asynchrony at hatch, but overall hatching success was unaffected by experimental egg number. I conclude that small, calidrine sandpipers with biparental care are able to compensate for an additional egg in an enlarged nestbowl, despite the constraints of conically shaped eggs and two brood patches. Possibly, shorebirds do not lay more than a fixed clutch size of four eggs because selection on factors acting during egg production or brood-rearing is more important in regulating offspring number.

Keywords: Key words Invariant offspring number ;   Incubation capacity ;  Calidris sandpipers;  Clutch size 

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