Fuente: USGS Newsroom
  Expuesto el: jueves, 14 de junio de 2012 16:00
  Autor: USGS Newsroom
  Asunto: Lifetime Mates Good for the Goose and the Gander
| ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Not    all birds mate for life, but for those species that do, wildlife biologists    have found a clear benefit to the birds from such long-term relationships: greater    longevity and breeding success, according to a study recently published in    Behavioral Ecology The study's authors found    that when female black brant (a small arctic goose) lose their mate, their    chances for survival are greatly diminished. The study is the first to    characterize health effects of mate loss to female geese, and its conclusions    have implications for wildlife population management.  "Scientists now have    evidence to demonstrate that in species that mate for life, harvesting of    males can have the unintended consequence of reducing the survival prospects    for their female mates, in some cases, 'killing two birds with one    stone'," said USGS Director Marcia McNutt. "The evidence says that    only the very fittest and strongest of the females will survive the loss of    her mate to breed again."  "In fluctuating    waterfowl populations, as has occurred in black brant, female health is often    the most sensitive factor that regulates populations," says David Ward,    a research wildlife biologist with the U.S. Geological Survey’s Alaska    Science Center and co-author of the study.  In the study, led by    Chris Nicolai and Jim Sedinger of the University of Nevada, Reno, the    researchers followed over 2,000 known pairs of black brant to examine the    effect on female survival and their subsequent reproduction after they lost    their mate during regular sport-hunting seasons.  The authors found that    female brant survival declined about 16 percent after losing a mate. The    authors also found evidence that only widowed females in better body    condition were able to re-pair with a new male and again reproduce. "Mate loss increases    the vulnerability of females to harvest and natural mortality because females    need protection by males during feeding, nesting, and migration.  It may    take an especially fit female to survive mate loss, re-pair with a new mate,    and continue reproducing in the future," says Nicolai, now a migratory    bird biologist with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. "In situations    where goose populations are fluctuating, population management actions could    focus on improving the maintenance of pair bonds and female health by    informing harvest policy, management of natural mortality, and habitat    improvements."  The study is part of a    decades-long investigation into the Brant, initiated by Sedinger, the lead    scientist on the project.  "Since 1984 we’ve    had a rustic summer basecamp near a brant nesting area 500 miles west of    Anchorage near Chevak, a small Eskimo village on the Bering Sea,"    Sedinger said. "The birds are also followed, using unique tagging codes,    while they winter in Mexico."  The paper, "Mate    loss affects survival but not breeding in black brant geese," was    recently published in Behavioral Ecology. The paper was authored by    Christopher A. Nicolai and James S. Sedinger from the University of Nevada,    Reno, David H. Ward from the U.S. Geological Survey Alaska Science Center,    and W. Sean Boyd from the Pacific Wildlife Research Centre, Canadian Wildlife    Service. Links and contacts within    this release are valid at the time of publication. 
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