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BFU unveils Incubation strategies shaped by latitudinal variations in uniparental incubating birds

Source:School of Ecology and Nature Conservation   

Mar. 25 2025

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Recently, Professor Xu Jiliang's research group from the School of Ecology and Nature Conservation has published a paper titled "Latitudinal variations in incubation behaviour among uniparental incubating birds" in Journal of Animal Ecology, an internationally renowned top journal in ecology.

Uniparental incubating birds must resolve the trade-off between self-maintenance and incubation. This balance manifests through diverse incubation behaviours that vary significantly among species and geographic regions. However, limited research has examined the variability of incubation behaviours across species and regions.

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Using Bayesian phylogenetic mixed models, the research team investigated how three incubation behaviours (off-bout frequency, off-bout duration and incubation constancy) vary with latitude across 201 uniparental incubating bird species.

The findings reveal distinct incubation strategies adopted by uniparental birds across latitudes. Species at lower latitudes exhibit fewer off-bouts and, meanwhile, have longer off-bout durations. Conversely, those at higher latitudes exhibit more frequent but shorter off-bouts. Notably, a clear latitude-dependent pattern emerges in incubation constancy, with higher latitudes showing greater incubation constancy. Additionally, smaller-bodied birds tend to take more frequent off-bouts. Significant variations in off-bout frequency were observed across different habitats. Herbivorous species, in particular, show higher incubation constancy compared to omnivorous and carnivorous birds.

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These findings offer valuable insights into the association of latitudinal variation with the evolutionary dynamics of life histories in uniparental incubating birds.

Professor Xu Jiliang from the School of Ecology and Nature Conservation is the corresponding author of the paper, with doctoral student Jin Ting as the first author. Beijing Forestry University is the signature unit of the first author.

This study was funded by the National Key Research and Development Program of China(No. 32470525和No.32222012).

Link: https://besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/1365-2656.70022


Written by Jin Ting
Translated and edited by Song He
Reviewed by Yu Yangyang

  
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