Abstract

Abstract In many bird species, eggs laid late in the breeding season hatch after a shorter incubation period than eggs that were laid early. The proximate mechanisms that cause these seasonal declines in incubation length remain poorly understood. We tested in Yellow-eyed Penguins (Megadyptes antipodes), Hipfner's hypothesis that late-laid eggs have thinner eggshells with a higher pore density that allow embryos to develop more rapidly than in early-laid eggs. In this species incubation length declines with increasing female age, so we also investigated whether eggshell thickness and pore density varies with female age. In addition, differences in shell thickness and pore density between first- and second-laid eggs of the same clutch were examined. Eggshell thickness did not change with laying date and was not related to length of incubation. In contrast, pore density increased with laying date and was negatively related to incubation length in first-laid eggs. Eggshell thickness and pore density increase...

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