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Journal of BirdLife Australia
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Sex-specific chick provisioning and kleptoparasitism in the Least Frigatebird, Fregata ariel

Bradley C. Congdon A C and Myriam Preker B
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- Author Affiliations

A School of Tropical Biology, James Cook University, PO Box 6811, 
Cairns, Qld 4870, Australia.

B 321 Pullenvale Road, Pullenvale, Qld 4069, Australia.

C Corresponding author. Email: brad.congdon@jcu.edu.au

Emu 104(4) 347-351 https://doi.org/10.1071/MU03008
Submitted: 16 March 2003  Accepted: 22 July 2004   Published: 16 December 2004

Abstract

We examined sex-specific patterns of provisioning behaviour and kleptoparasitic host-use in the Least Frigatebird Fregata ariel. We aimed to determine, first, whether sex-specific kleptoparasitism, either at sea, or adjacent to the breeding colony, is an important source of food for chick provisioning and, second, whether observed behaviour is consistent with the expectation that sexual size-dimorphism in resource-poor environments consistently results in sex-specific divergence of foraging behaviour. We observed sex-specific differences in the time of day that adult frigatebirds provision chicks but no differences in the overall provisioning rate between sexes. We also observed no sex-specific kleptoparasitism via simultaneous monitoring of provisioning by Least Frigatebirds and Masked Boobies. Sex-specific differences in prey types attacked at the colony were observed, but these conflicted with predictions based on previous studies and were directly correlated with diural patterns of adult frigatebird attendance. Overall, we suggest that sexual differences in foraging behaviour in Least Frigatebirds are minimal and relate to either the use of different risk-sensitive foraging strategies by each sex, or are a consequence of body size differences in independently foraging sexes. While our results must be considered preliminary, we believe they provide justification for further critical examination of mechanisms of sex-specific behavioural divergence in seabird taxa.


Acknowledgments

Our sincere thanks to the following people and institutions who provided logistic assistance during this project: John Cornelius, Dave Neil, Pam Dyer, the Raine Island Corporation, the crew of the QNPWS research vessel Kerra Lyn, the Queensland National Parks and Wildlife Service (Cairns). This project was funded by a Raine Island Corporation Research Support Grant.


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