A Trade-Off between Reproduction and Feather Growth in the Barn Swallow (Hirundo rustica)
Male
0106 biological sciences
Sex Characteristics
Time Factors
Science
Reproduction
Q
R
Feathers
Molting
Clutch Size
01 natural sciences
Africa South of the Sahara; Animal Migration; Animals; Clutch Size; Feathers; Female; Italy; Male; Molting; Reproduction; Sex Characteristics; Swallows; Time Factors; Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (all); Medicine (all); Agricultural and Biological Sciences (all)
Italy
Swallows
Medicine
Animals
Animal Migration
Female
Africa South of the Sahara
Research Article
DOI:
10.1371/journal.pone.0096428
Publication Date:
2014-05-14T20:26:02Z
AUTHORS (8)
ABSTRACT
Physiological trade-offs mediated by limiting energy, resources or time constrain the simultaneous expression of major functions and can lead to the evolution of temporal separation between demanding activities. In birds, plumage renewal is a demanding activity, which accomplishes fundamental functions, such as allowing thermal insulation, aerodynamics and socio-sexual signaling. Feather renewal is a very expensive and disabling process, and molt is often partitioned from breeding and migration. However, trade-offs between feather renewal and breeding have been only sparsely studied. In barn swallows (Hirundo rustica) breeding in Italy and undergoing molt during wintering in sub-Saharan Africa, we studied this trade-off by removing a tail feather from a large sample of individuals and analyzing growth bar width, reflecting feather growth rate, and length of the growing replacement feather in relation to the stage in the breeding cycle at removal and clutch size. Growth bar width of females and length of the growing replacement feather of both sexes were smaller when the original feather had been removed after clutch initiation. Importantly, in females both growth bar width and replacement feather length were negatively predicted by clutch size, and more strongly so for large clutches and when feather removal occurred immediately after clutch completion. Hence, we found strong, coherent evidence for a trade-off between reproduction, and laying effort in particular, and the ability to generate new feathers. These results support the hypothesis that the derived condition of molting during wintering in long-distance migrants is maintained by the costs of overlapping breeding and molt.
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