Journal
JOURNAL OF FIELD ORNITHOLOGY
Volume 80, Issue 1, Pages 101-110Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1557-9263.2009.00211.x
Keywords
chick mortality; disturbance; productivity; shorebird; Vanellus vanellus
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Funding
- Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council
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Color bands and radio tags are widely used to facilitate individual recognition and relocation of precocial chicks in studies of prefledging survival. However, the accuracy of data collected and subsequent estimates of survival rates rely on the assumption that such techniques do not affect the parameters under study. We compared the body condition and survival of color-banded and radio-tagged Lapwing (Vanellus vanellus) chicks with noncolor-banded and nonradio-tagged individuals using a 10-year dataset (N = 3174 chicks, with 205 color banded and 700 radio tagged). Color bands did not adversely affect chicks. However, radio-tagged chicks and their untagged broodmates were handled more frequently because these broods were more readily encountered than those without a tagged member. Chicks disturbed and handled more frequently had lower body condition indices and higher mortality rates. Simulations of the impact of tagging and handling on breeding productivity under two scenarios indicated a 26% reduction in productivity in situations where nest and chick survival rates were low (as in our study), but only a 7% reduction in productivity for a simulated population with the higher levels of nest and chick survival associated with a stable population. The frequent disturbance associated with radio-tracking and recapturing chicks, rather than the attachment of a tag or physical handling of chicks, may affect body condition. Frequent handling and disturbance may affect body condition by reducing foraging time, increasing stress levels, or increasing predation risk. Because our results suggested that the negative impact of handling could last up to a week, we recommend that investigators avoid disturbance of shorebird chicks more frequently than every 8 d.
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