Abstract

Abstract Little is known about the period between fledging and breeding in long-lived birds, including survival rates and factors affecting survival, yet this period may be critical to population regulation. We conducted health exams on 72 nestling Wood Storks (Mycteria americana) aged 4–6 weeks, and monitored survival of these birds via satellite telemetry for up to two years of age. Eighty-two percent of nestlings fitted with transmitters in 2002 (n = 33) survived to fledging. Of these fledglings (n = 27), 44% survived their first year. Second-year survival for the same cohort (n = 12) was 75%. In contrast, 50% of nestlings fitted with transmitters in 2003 (n = 34) survived to fledging, and 6% of fledglings (n = 17) survived the first year. Of the health parameters we measured in large nestlings, white blood cell count was consistently the most closely related to postfledging survival. Significantly elevated heterophil:lymphocyte ratios in 2003 coincided with the observed high colony abandonment that ye...

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