Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2418125 Animal Behaviour 2007 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

Decreased risk of predation is a key benefit of group living, and selfish herd theory predicts competition for the relative safety of central positions. Spatial position also affects behaviour, as individuals trade-off their feeding and vigilance to mitigate the risk of predation. Female eiders, Somateria mollissima, often pool their broods and share brood rearing, and anti-predatory vigilance is a core parental care activity. Females are assumed to trade-off vigilance and feeding, as efficient recovery of condition is crucial for energetically stressed postincubating females. Evidence shows that a female's own ducklings are closer to her than unrelated young in amalgamated broods and that predation of ducklings by gulls is edge biased, so a female's spatial position should correlate with the survival prospects of her brood. We identified determinants of female spatial position (aggression, structural size, body weight, age, clutch size) within multifemale brood-rearing coalitions, and explored whether spatial position affected female activities. Female aggression frequency was the only significant predictor of centrality in brood-rearing coalitions, and female age was positively associated with aggression. Investment in vigilance, but not investment in feeding, increased with spatial centrality; instead, central females devoted less time to other activities (resting, preening and moving). We conclude that central eider females do not need to trade-off vigilance and feeding. Heavy body weight did not guarantee a favourable position in brood-rearing coalitions, which may help explain our previous finding that female eiders in best body condition when their brood hatches tend their brood alone.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Animal Science and Zoology
Authors
, , ,