Here we investigate possible carryover effects of experimentally increased incubation temperatures for postnatal growth, metabolism, and parental care within and among 6 north temperate and one tropical songbird species. Increased temperatures during embryonic development consistently caused higher postnatal resting metabolism compared to control nests, among but not within the 7 species studied. The effects of the experiment on growth were species specific and depended on the morphometric considered. Size before the fledge date was positively correlated with feeding rate, and metabolism was lower in larger broods. Our experiment did not elicit changes in parental food delivery rates or brooding effort during the postnatal stage, and higher brooding effort was associated with nestlings of smaller mass and faster metabolism independently from treatment. Consequently, parental care seemed unlikely to be the cause of the differences in growth rates between treatments. Instead, physiological mechanisms triggered by our heating treatment appear to be responsible for the observed variation in growth. These intrinsic changes unmatched by adjustments in parental effort may contribute to longer-term consequences for individual quality and survival that deserve further attention.
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Ton, Riccardo ; Martin, Thomas E. ( , Journal of Experimental Biology)null (Ed.)ABSTRACT Metabolism is thought to mediate the connection between environmental selection pressures and a broad array of life history tradeoffs, but tests are needed. High juvenile predation correlates with fast growth, which may be achieved via fast juvenile metabolism. Fast offspring metabolism and growth can create physiological costs later in life that should be minimized in species with low adult mortality. Yet, relationships between juvenile metabolism and mortality at offspring versus adult stages are unexplored. We found that post-natal metabolism was positively correlated with adult mortality but not nest predation rates among 43 songbird species on three continents. Nest predation, but not adult mortality, explained additional variation in growth rates beyond metabolism. Our results suggest that metabolism may not be the mechanism underlying the relationships between growth and mortality at different life stages.more » « less
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Martin, Thomas E. ; Ton, Riccardo ; Oteyza, Juan C. ( , The Auk)