Abstract

We document reproductive life history traits of the Three-striped Warbler (Basileuterus tristriatus) from 146 nests in Venezuela and compare our results to data from the literature for other tropical and temperate parulid species. Mean (± SE) clutch size was 1.96 ± 0.03 eggs (n = 96) and fresh egg mass was 2.09 ± 0.02 g. The incubation period was 15.8 ± 0.2 days (n = 23) and the nestling period was 10.5 ± 0.3 days (n = 12). Males did not incubate and rarely provided food for females during incubation. Females had 57 ± 2% (n = 49) nest attentiveness (% of time on the nest incubating), which caused egg temperature to commonly become cold relative to development. Both adults fed nestlings and feeding rates increased with nestling age. The growth rate constant for nestlings based on mass was K = 0.490, which is slower than for north temperate warblers. Predation was the primary source of nest failure and only 22% of nests were successful based on a Mayfield daily predation rate of 0.048 ± 0.006. Our literature review indicates parulids differ strongly in life histories between temperate and tropical/subtropical sites with species in the tropics having, on average, smaller clutches, longer incubation periods, lower nest attentiveness, longer off-bouts, and longer nestling periods.

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