Abstract

In seabirds, equal bi-parental care is the rule, as it is considered crucial for raising chicks successfully because seabirds forage in an environment with unpredictable and highly variable food supply. Frigatebirds forage in poor tropical waters, yet males reduce and even stop parental care soon after chick brooding, leaving the female to provision the chick alone for an extended fledging period. Using bird-borne tracking devices, male and female Christmas Island Frigatebirds (Fregata andrewsi) were investigated during the brooding, late chick rearing and post-fledging period to examine whether sexes exhibit foraging strategies that may be linked to differential breeding investments. During brooding, males and females showed similar foraging behaviour under average marine productivity of oceanic waters close to the colony, but males shifted to more distant and more productive habitats when conditions deteriorated to continue with reduced chick provisioning. During the late chick rearing period, females progressively increased their foraging range to the more distant but productive marine areas that only males had visited during brooding. Birds spent the non-breeding period roosting in highly productive waters of the Sunda Shelf. The sex-specific utilisation of three different foraging habitats with different primary productivity (oceanic, coastal, and shelf areas) allowed for temporal and spatial segregation in the exploitation of favourable habitats which seems to enable each sex to optimise its foraging profitability. In addition, post-fledging foraging movements of females suggest a biennial breeding cycle, while limited information on males suggests the possibility of an annual breeding cycle.

Highlights

  • IntroductionCare by both parents is required to rear offspring successfully [1]

  • In most bird species, care by both parents is required to rear offspring successfully [1]

  • Care by both parents is required to rear offspring successfully [1]. This situation is even more general in seabirds where equal biparental care is found in almost all species [2,3,4], probably because seabirds forage at sea where prey availability is often highly

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Summary

Introduction

Care by both parents is required to rear offspring successfully [1]. This situation is even more general in seabirds where equal biparental care is found in almost all species [2,3,4], probably because seabirds forage at sea where prey availability is often highly. Grube KG Hützel, Rische & Herfurth Hamburg and The North Face Inc. USA provided inkind support. Satellite transmitters used in 2005 and 2007 were provided by the North Star Science and Technology LLC Annual Grant Program by Northstar Science & Technology LLC, USA, in association with the American Ornithologists Union in 2005 (4 devices) and in 2006 (2 devices). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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