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  • Springer  (3)
  • Minneapolis :Ivy Press, The,  (2)
  • Wilson Ornithological Society  (2)
Publisher
Language
Years
  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Minneapolis :Ivy Press, The,
    Keywords: Birds. ; Birds--Identification. ; Birds--Pictorial works. ; Electronic books.
    Description / Table of Contents: Birds introduces you to 75 fascinating species from around the world.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (182 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9780711258440
    Series Statement: Gems of Nature Series
    DDC: 598
    Language: English
    Note: Cover -- Title -- Contents -- Introduction -- The Birds -- Wilson's Storm-Petrel -- King Penguin -- Common Loon -- Eared Grebe -- American Flamingo -- Tundra Swan -- Northern Shoveler -- Canada Goose -- Long-Tailed Duck -- Common Eider -- White Stork -- White Ibis -- Little Blue Heron -- Brown Pelican -- Black-Necked Stilt -- Northern Jacana -- Long-Billed Curlew -- Ruddy Turnstone -- American Woodcock -- Greater Painted-Snipe -- Least Tern -- Great Skua -- Razorbill -- Tufted Puffin -- Common Ostrich -- Southern Cassowary -- Southern Brown Kiwi -- Northern Bobwhite -- Cabot's Tragopan -- Ring-Necked Pheasant -- Green Peafowl -- Egyptian Vulture -- Golden Eagle -- Peregrine Falcon -- Little Bustard -- Great Horned Owl -- Snowy Owl -- Mourning Dove -- Common Cuckoo -- Costa's Hummingbird -- Common Kingfisher -- Blue-Cheeked Bee-Eater -- White-Throated Toucan -- Williamson's Sapsucker -- Pileated Woodpecker -- Olive-Sided Flycatcher -- Ash-Throated Flycatcher -- Eastern Kingbird -- Loggerhead Shrike -- Yellow-Throated Vireo -- Indian Paradise Flycatcher -- Blue Jay -- Common Raven -- Bearded Reedling -- Cliff Swallow -- Brown-Headed Nuthatch -- Blue-Gray Gnatcatcher -- Western Bluebird -- Wood Thrush -- Gray Catbird -- Common Starling -- White Wagtail -- Snow Bunting -- Cape May Warbler -- Black-Throated Blue Warbler -- Painted Redstart -- American Tree Sparrow -- Yellowhammer -- Scarlet Tanager -- Indigo Bunting -- Red-Winged Blackbird -- Orchard Oriole -- Common Chaffinch -- Eurasian Bullfinch -- Zebra Finch -- Glossary -- Further Resources -- Index -- Acknowledgments -- About the Author -- Copyright.
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  • 2
    Keywords: Birds--Breeding. ; Birds--Eggs. ; Birds--Nests. ; Electronic books.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (2297 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9781782401384
    DDC: 598.14679999999998
    Language: English
    Note: Cover -- Title -- Contents -- Foreword by John Bates -- Introduction -- Egg anatomy & -- physiology -- Egg size & -- shape -- Egg coloration & -- patterning -- Nests & -- eggs -- Breeding strategies: clutch size -- Breeding strategies: nest parasitism -- Science & -- egg collections -- The eggs -- WATER BIRDS -- LARGE NON-PASSERINE LAND BIRDS -- SMALL NON-PASSERINE LAND BIRDS -- PASSERINES -- Appendices -- Glossary -- Resources & -- useful information -- The classification of birds -- Index by common name -- Index by scientific name -- Acknowledgments -- Copyright.
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2021-02-08
    Description: Marine top predators forage in environments that show potentially extreme temporal and spatial variation in prey availability, with reproductive success being crucially linked to food supply. Multiple factors of interannual and sexual variation, as well as variation across breeding stages, can shape patterns of spatial use in foraging seabirds, yet studies that address all of these variables simultaneously are rare. We present spatial assessment of foraging patterns by µGPS tracking of a sexually size monomorphic, long-lived species, the Australasian gannet (Morus serrator). The study spanned the incubation and chick-rearing stages in three consecutive breeding seasons. Our findings revealed high interannual variability in foraging distances and trip durations, but no consistent differences between birds across different breeding stages or the sexes. The exception was that core foraging areas were different for female and male Australasian gannets, although trip durations or distances were similar for both sexes. Our results also indicate bimodality in foraging distance and trip duration in this species, while highlighting interannual variability in the extent of bimodality. These findings contribute to a scarcely documented type of foraging behaviour in the seabird family of the Sulidae. Overall, these spatial use patterns provide a baseline for understanding the evolution of sex-specific foraging differences in biparental seabirds, and the extent to which these differences might help in securing breeding success across years of variable food availability.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2020-07-20
    Description: New technologies enable tracking of the route, duration, and destination of previously unassessed long-distance movements. Fledgling Australasian Gannets Morus serrator from breeding populations in New Zealand had been reported to fly across the Tasman Sea to Australia, with this historic knowledge derived from the recovery of banded carcasses and from observations of initial flight direction. We deployed Argos satellite devices on ten M. serrator fledglings at Cape Kidnappers Gannetry, North Island, New Zealand, across 2 years. Birds that were tracked leaving the colony initially appeared to have landed on the sea. A male bird and two female birds were tracked moving along the east coast to the south tip of New Zealand. The two females then crossed the Tasman Sea to eastern Australian coastal waters in 4 and 5 days, respectively. We suggest that, contrary to historic reports, the route via Stewart Island constitutes a realized migration path for fledglings from Cape Kidnappers, which might minimize the distance traveled across the open sea to southeastern Australia or Tasmania. Our results further imply that initial direction of flight needs not be indicative of the subsequent migration route taken by M. serrator. This highlights the importance of direct tracking technology for adequate assessment of dispersal and migration in seabirds and other highly mobile species.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2020-05-27
    Description: The long breeding period and high reproductive investment of seabirds make use of resource-rich foraging areas pivotal both during and between breeding seasons. We tracked adult Australasian Gannets (Morus serrator) from their New Zealand breeding colony at Cape Kidnappers to Australia during the non-breeding period to assess wintering behavior and migratory routes for this species. Data from three recovered geolocation sensor (GLS) tags showed that both a male and a female M. serrator, and a hybrid M. capensis X M. serrator migrated across the Tasman Sea to winter in Australian and Tasmanian coastal waters. Tracked birds covered distances of up to 13,000 km on their migration. These movements were consistent with historical records of band recoveries
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2020-06-22
    Description: Studies of the selective advantages of divorce in socially monogamous bird species have unravelled extensive variation among different lineages with diverse ecologies. We quantified the reproductive correlates of mate retention, mate loss and divorce in a highly philopatric, colonially breeding biparental seabird, the Australasian gannet Morus serrator. Estimates of annual divorce rates varied between 40-43% for M. serrator and were high in comparison with both the closely related Morus bassanus and the range of divorce rates reported across monogamous avian breeding systems. Mate retention across seasons was related to consistently higher reproductive success compared with mate replacement, while divorce per se contributed significantly to lower reproductive output only in one of two breeding seasons. Prior reproductive success was not predictive of mate replacement overall or divorce in particular. These patterns are in accordance with the musical chairs hypothesis of adaptive divorce theory, which operates in systems characterised by asynchronous territorial establishment.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2023-02-08
    Description: Territorial protandry, or early season male-biased settlement at breeding sites, is a widespread phenomenon in a range of animal breeding systems. While protandry is common across several avian lineages and has been linked with increased reproductive success of earlier breeding males in terrestrial species, the selective advantage of breeding protandry has only rarely been studied in seabirds. We assessed the seasonal changes in the sex ratio at the breeding site and sexspecific correlates of arrival date with reproductive success during 2 breeding seasons of a colonial seabird, the Australasian Gannet (Morus serrator), at Cape Kidnappers, New Zealand.We found no biases in overall sex ratios of adults and fledglings but detected a male sex bias during nest site establishment, and a significantly higher probability of reproductive success for earlier-settling males. In contrast, the reproductive success of females did not correlate with the timing of arrival. Our findings provide an assessment of the sex differences in reproductive correlates of the timing of breeding settlement in gannets and are consistent with selective advantages as suggested by indirect selection hypotheses. This study contributes to our understanding of the fitness benefits of protandry, and its linkages with sex differences in breeding philopatry and mate fidelity, in a long-lived seabird species with obligate and extended biparental care.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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