Egg-laying, incubation and intraspecific nest parasitism by the mandarin duck aix galericulata

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Abstract

Incubated clutches of the Mandarin Duck were larger earlier in the breeding sea-son. At all nests there were days on which a single egg, and days on which no egg was added to a clutch; days on which more than one egg was added to a clutch were less frequent. Larger clutches had proportionately more days on which two or more eggs were added; the proportion of days on which no eggs were added was unrelated to clutch size. Larger clutches had a relatively shorter laying period than expected, but a longer incubation period than smaller clutches. Unhatched eggs resulted mainly from embryonic mortality, which was concentrated in the period just prior to pipping. Similar proportions of unhatched eggs resulted from eggs laid into clutches before and after the start of incubation. Larger clutches did not have proportionately more unhatched eggs. As all clutches had at least one day on which no eggs were laid, it is proposed that the proportion of nests parasitized was greater than that estimated from nests with more than one egg, laid on any one day. © 1989 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.

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Davies, A. K., & Baggott, G. K. (1989). Egg-laying, incubation and intraspecific nest parasitism by the mandarin duck aix galericulata. Bird Study, 36(2), 115–122. https://doi.org/10.1080/00063658909477013

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