Breeding propensity, the proportion of sexually mature females that initiate egg production, can be an important demographic trait when considering reproductive performance and, subsequently, population dynamics in birds. We measured egg production using yolk precursor (vitellogenin and very-low-density lipoprotein) analyses and we measured nesting using radiotelemetry to quantify breeding propensity of adult female harlequin ducks (Histrionicus histrionicus) in British Columbia, Canada, in 2003 and 2004. Using both methods combined, and accounting for error rates of each, we estimated that breeding propensity of adult females that migrated to breeding streams was 92%. These data suggest that, despite speculation that harlequin ducks have low breeding propensity, almost all adult females on our study site were not constrained in their ability to produce eggs and that influences on reproductive performance at later stages likely have much stronger effects on population dynamics.
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1 August 2008
Breeding Propensity of Female Harlequin Ducks
Jeanine C. Bond,
Daniel Esler,
Tony D. Williams
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Journal of Wildlife Management
Vol. 72 • No. 6
August 2008
Vol. 72 • No. 6
August 2008
breeding propensity
Histrionicus histrionicus
nonbreeders
radiotelemetry
vitellogenin
yolk precursors