Abstract
The extant auks show three strategies of chick rearing - precocial (chicks leave the nest site when a few days old), intermediate (young raised to a mass of around 20% of adult mass) and semi-precocial (young raised to a mass of around 65% of adult mass). It is not known which strategy the extinct Great Auk used. In this paper, we investigate this issue by a novel combination of a time and energy budget model and phylogenetic comparison. The first approach indicates that for reasonable estimates of the equation parameters, the Great Auk could have followed an intermediate strategy. For a limited range of parameters, the Great Auk could have followed the semi-precocial strategy. Phylogenetic comparison shows that it is unlikely that the Great Auk followed a precocial strategy. The results suggest that the Great Auk followed an intermediate strategy as does its presumed closest extant relative the Razorbill. © 2010 The Authors. Journal Compilation © 2010 European Society For Evolutionary Biology.
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Houston, A. I., Wood, J., & Wilkinson, M. (2010). How did the Great Auk raise its young? Journal of Evolutionary Biology, 23(9), 1899–1906. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1420-9101.2010.02047.x
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