Abstract
The begging behavior of birds is thought to influence the allocation of food within the brood (allocation function) or to increase the total amount of food delivered to the brood (delivery function). Considering the nature of the feeding activity of passerines, in which hundreds of feeding events occur in a single day, parents may not necessarily decide the amount of resources allocated to each nestling/brood during a single feeding event. To examine this possibility, the relationship between begging intensity and parental responses to allocation and delivery functions was tested and modeled at multi-temporal scales in the barn swallow (Hirundo rustica). Comparison of models revealed that barn swallow parents differed in the temporal scales at which they respond to nestlings with respect to these two functions. While barn swallow parents decide which nestling to feed at a focal feeding event according to chick begging of the focal feeding event, they integrated past information on total begging effort to determine delivery rates to their offspring during the 14 and 6 min prior to the focal feeding event in males and females, respectively. These findings highlight that it is important to investigate parental response to begging at appropriate temporal scales when analyzing begging functions.
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