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1 May 2000 THE THERMAL REGIME OF EGGS DURING LAYING AND INCUBATION IN GREATER SNOW GEESE
Catherine Poussart, Jacques Larochelle, Gilles Gauthier
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Abstract

Dummy eggs were added to naturally incubated clutches of Greater Snow Geese (Chen caerulescens atlantica), an arctic-nesting species, in order to evaluate egg temperature during laying and incubation, and factors influencing egg cooling rate during female recesses. As laying progressed, both nest attentiveness by females and egg temperature progressively increased. Although the time spent at nest after laying the penultimate egg was relatively high (69% vs. 91% during incubation), mean egg temperature was still 5.7°C lower than during the early incubation period. This suggests that little embryonic development began before clutch completion. Thereafter, egg temperature averaged 37.1 ± 0.1°C during periods where females were present, a value that decreased only slightly when incubation recesses are included (36.8°C). This is a high temperature in comparison to other arctic-nesting geese. A modest increase (1.7°C) in mean egg temperature was observed as incubation progressed, but egg temperature was not influenced by clutch size or by the laying date of the first egg. During recesses lasting 24.7 ± 1.3 min on average, egg temperature dropped by 2.8 ± 0.3°C, at an instantaneous rate of 0.23 ± 0.02°C hr−1 °C−1. Cooling rates increased under windy conditions and decreased with high solar radiation, but were little affected by air temperature.

Catherine Poussart, Jacques Larochelle, and Gilles Gauthier "THE THERMAL REGIME OF EGGS DURING LAYING AND INCUBATION IN GREATER SNOW GEESE," The Condor 102(2), 292-300, (1 May 2000). https://doi.org/10.1650/0010-5422(2000)102[0292:TTROED]2.0.CO;2
Received: 3 June 1999; Accepted: 1 January 2000; Published: 1 May 2000
KEYWORDS
Arctic
Chen caerulescens atlantica
egg temperature
greater snow goose
incubation
laying
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