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Raising young with limited resources: supplementation improves nestling condition and advances fledging of Canada jays. / Freeman, Nikole E; Norris, D. Ryan; Sutton, A.O. et al.
In: Ecology, Vol. 101, No. 1, e02651, 01.01.2020.

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Freeman NE, Norris DR, Sutton AO, Newman A. Raising young with limited resources: supplementation improves nestling condition and advances fledging of Canada jays. Ecology. 2020 Jan 1;101(1):e02651. Epub 2019 Oct 12. doi: https://doi.org/10.1002/ecy.2909

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TY - JOUR

T1 - Raising young with limited resources: supplementation improves nestling condition and advances fledging of Canada jays

AU - Freeman, Nikole E

AU - Norris, D. Ryan

AU - Sutton, A.O.

AU - Newman, Amy

PY - 2020/1/1

Y1 - 2020/1/1

N2 - Food availability early in life can play a vital role in an individual's development and success, but experimental evidence for the direct effects of food on body condition, physiology, and survival of young animals in the wild is still relatively scarce. Food-caching Canada Jays (Perisoreus canadensis) begin breeding in the late winter and, therefore, rely on either cached food or seemingly limited quantities of fresh food to feed nestlings in the early spring. Using a 2-yr food supplementation experiment conducted during the nestling period and 40 yr of observational data on food supplemented by the public, we examined whether food quantity during early life influenced the physiology, body condition, timing of fledging, and survival of young Canada Jays in Algonquin Provincial Park, Ontario, Canada. Experimental food supplementation of breeding pairs advanced the fledging date of young by 24% (5.5 d) compared to controls. In 1 yr of the experiment, nestlings raised on experimentally supplemented territories had lower feather corticosterone concentrations and were in higher body condition than controls. Across treatment and control nests, young that successfully fledged had lower concentrations of feather corticosterone and were in higher body condition than those that did not fledge. Based on 40 yr of observational data, nestling body condition was positively related to the degree of food supplementation by park visitors and nestlings in higher body condition were more likely to be observed in the population in the following fall. Our results demonstrate how food availability early in life can have important downstream consequences on metrics related to individual fitness, including first year survival.

AB - Food availability early in life can play a vital role in an individual's development and success, but experimental evidence for the direct effects of food on body condition, physiology, and survival of young animals in the wild is still relatively scarce. Food-caching Canada Jays (Perisoreus canadensis) begin breeding in the late winter and, therefore, rely on either cached food or seemingly limited quantities of fresh food to feed nestlings in the early spring. Using a 2-yr food supplementation experiment conducted during the nestling period and 40 yr of observational data on food supplemented by the public, we examined whether food quantity during early life influenced the physiology, body condition, timing of fledging, and survival of young Canada Jays in Algonquin Provincial Park, Ontario, Canada. Experimental food supplementation of breeding pairs advanced the fledging date of young by 24% (5.5 d) compared to controls. In 1 yr of the experiment, nestlings raised on experimentally supplemented territories had lower feather corticosterone concentrations and were in higher body condition than controls. Across treatment and control nests, young that successfully fledged had lower concentrations of feather corticosterone and were in higher body condition than those that did not fledge. Based on 40 yr of observational data, nestling body condition was positively related to the degree of food supplementation by park visitors and nestlings in higher body condition were more likely to be observed in the population in the following fall. Our results demonstrate how food availability early in life can have important downstream consequences on metrics related to individual fitness, including first year survival.

U2 - https://doi.org/10.1002/ecy.2909

DO - https://doi.org/10.1002/ecy.2909

M3 - Article

VL - 101

JO - Ecology

JF - Ecology

SN - 0012-9658

IS - 1

M1 - e02651

ER -