Abstract

In Fennoscandia the Goldcrest regularly lays two clutches per breeding season. Near Trondheim in Central Norway (about 63° N) the mean size of 11 first clutches was 10.4 (9–12) eggs and of 10 second/repeat clutches 9.4 (8–11) eggs. Mean egg length was 13.49 mm, breadth 10.35 mm, mean weight of freshly-laid eggs 0.78 g, volume 737 mm3 and shape index 130.6. The correlation coefficient for egg length against weight was 0.47, and for egg breadth against weight 0.77. For the four clutches studied in more detail, all egg dimensions, except the shape index, increased with the laying sequence. On average, the last-laid egg was 20.1 % heavier than the first-laid egg, or 5.6 % heavier than the mean weight for the whole clutch. The 3–5 last-laid eggs in the clutch deviated by about the same magnitude from the clutch mean. Because of the pronounced asynchrony in hatching, the size-hierarchy within a Goldcrest brood may be considerable, at least 1:5. The survival chances of the smallest young in a brood apparently depend mainly on the prevailing food supply. The primary advantage of hatching from a relatively large-sized egg is probably that such a hatchling is strong enough to secure itself a favourable feeding position in the crowded nest, in which the young often form 2–3 horizontal layers. The parental selection of food is adjusted to the size of the young, even in a brood with a marked size-hierarchy. It is concluded that the Goldcrest has evolved a brood reduction strategy.

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