Physiological tools can be used to identify the sources and consequences of stressors on animals. Understanding the influences of variation in habitat quality and anthropogenic disturbance on organism condition and healthmay improve future management and conservation. We present results concerning variation in haemoglobin and glucose concentrations in the blood of about 14-day-old nestling Pied Flycatchers Ficedula hypoleuca in central Poland over a 4-year period, 2011–2014, in a deciduous forest. The most important findings of the study are: (1) the concentration of haemoglobin and glucose of the nestlings from the same brood tended to be consistently similar, with much variation occurring among broods; (2) repeatability of haemoglobin concentration was higher than repeatability of glucose concentration; (3) mean levels of haemoglobin and glucose varied among years; (4) haemoglobin and glucose concentrations were negatively correlated; and (5) there was a positive relationship between haemoglobin levels and breeding success.
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Glądalski, M., Skwarska, J., Kaliński, A., Bańbura, M., Markowski, M., Wawrzyniak, J., … Bańbura, J. (2015). Patterns of year-to-year variation in haemoglobin and glucose concentrations in the blood of nestling pied flycatchers ficedula hypoleuca. Journal of Ornithology, 156(3), 811–817. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10336-015-1201-x
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