PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

As the egg turns: monitoring egg attendance behavior in wild birds using novel data logging technology.

  • Scott A Shaffer,
  • Corey A Clatterbuck,
  • Emma C Kelsey,
  • Alex D Naiman,
  • Lindsay C Young,
  • Eric A VanderWerf,
  • Pete Warzybok,
  • Russell Bradley,
  • Jaime Jahncke,
  • Geoff C Bower

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0097898
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 6
p. e97898

Abstract

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Egg turning is unique to birds and critical for embryonic development in most avian species. Technology that can measure changes in egg orientation and temperature at fine temporal scales (1 Hz) was neither readily available nor small enough to fit into artificial eggs until recently. Here we show the utility of novel miniature data loggers equipped with 3-axis (i.e., triaxial) accelerometers, magnetometers, and a temperature thermistor to study egg turning behavior in free-ranging birds. Artificial eggs containing egg loggers were deployed in the nests of three seabird species for 1-7 days of continuous monitoring. These species (1) turned their eggs more frequently (up to 6.5 turns h(-1)) than previously reported for other species, but angular changes were often small (1-10° most common), (2) displayed similar mean turning rates (ca. 2 turns h(-1)) despite major differences in reproductive ecology, and (3) demonstrated distinct diurnal cycling in egg temperatures that varied between 1.4 and 2.4 °C. These novel egg loggers revealed high-resolution, three-dimensional egg turning behavior heretofore never measured in wild birds. This new form of biotechnology has broad applicability for addressing fundamental questions in avian breeding ecology, life history, and development, and can be used as a tool to monitor birds that are sensitive to disturbance while breeding.