AN INDIVIDUAL-BASED MODEL TO ESTIMATE THE DAILY ENERGETIC COST OF GREATER RHEAS AND ITS CONTRIBUTION ON POPULATION RECRUITMENT
Authored by Simoy Maria Veronica, Fernandez Gustavo Javier, Canziani Graciela Ana
Date Published: 2013
DOI: 10.1111/nrm.12008
Sponsors:
National Scientific and Technical Research Council (CONICET)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
An individual-based model for estimating the energetic costs in Rhea
americana was developed considering their sexual and seasonal
differences in the behavioral activities. The model includes as
variables the individual's characteristics, as well as corporal weight, the time spent on different activities, and the cost associated with
each activity. We estimated the daily energetic demand of an adult rhea
based on the activities individuals normally develop during
postreproductive, nonreproductive, and reproductive seasons, differentiating between sexes. The time spent in each activity for one
given animal was calculated from field observations of individuals and
the estimations of energetic costs for each activity were obtained from
specialized literature. The model built varied between sexes because
males and females have different reproductive costs. Both models have
the same general formulation but they differ in the cost associated with
reproduction. In Greater Rheas, while males assume all of the
incubation, the females only lay eggs communally in a single nest. Also
the possibility that the individual reproduces or not was considered.
The model does not allow to determine whether the energetic costs
associated with the breeding are the reason why few individuals try to
reproduce but it indicates that there is a clear difference in the daily
energetic costs of individuals which reproduce and those which do not
reproduce. Other activities associated with parental care posthatching, not taken into account here, would increase these differences, and would
explain the low number of breeding attempts observed at wild.
Tags
behavior
Size
Field metabolic-rate
Common rhea
Large bird
Americana