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title: "Brood-guarding declines seasonally in Black-browed Albatrosses: the ‘synchronisation hypothesis'"
---

# Brood-guarding declines seasonally in Black-browed Albatrosses: the ‘synchronisation hypothesis'

Paulo Catry of the Institute of Applied Psychology - Eco-ethology Research Unit in Lisbon, Portugal and colleagues in a study published in the *[Journal of Avian Biology](http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1600-048X)* have looked at changes in brood-guard duration in Black-browed Albatrosses *Thalassarche melanophris*over a four-year period.

 **![](https://www.acap.aq/images/stories/acap/Birds/Albatrosses/B/Black_Browed_Albatross_by_Aleks_Terauds.jpg "Black-browed Albatross.  Photograph by Aleks Terauds")**

 The paper's abstract follows:

 "In birds, the period spent brooding or guarding young chicks is highly variable, but such variation has seldom been studied.  Previous single-year studies of Antarctic Petrels *Thalassoica antarctica* and Grey-headed Albatrosses *Thalassarche chrysostoma* revealed a pronounced seasonal decline in brood-guarding duration and gave rise to the ‘synchronisation hypothesis', which suggests that some of the variation in the length of the brood-guarding stage is related to predictable seasonal changes in the risk of chick predation.  We tested the predictions of this and three other hypotheses in a two-site, four-year study of the Black-browed Albatross *T. melanophris*.  The existence of a pronounced seasonal decline in brood-guarding duration was apparent at both sites, and in years of contrasting food availability, providing further support for the ‘synchronisation hypothesis'.  Alternative explanations for this pattern are that short brood-guarding periods for late-hatched chicks result from a seasonal decline in food availability or from the fact that early nesting birds are of higher individual quality.  However, these explanations are at odds with the absence of a seasonal decline in early chick growth or in probability of chick survival.  Furthermore, adult quality (measured as past reproductive performance) had a weak and inconsistent effect on the duration of brood-guarding.  Weather changes explained some of the variation in brood-guarding, but there were no differences between regions of contrasting climates.  Individual pairs displayed a degree of inter-annual consistency in brood-guarding duration and, at least in some years, longer brood-guarding resulted in higher fledging probability.  We speculate that a higher investment in brood-guarding increases the cost of reproduction, which counteracts other selective pressures that would otherwise lead to longer brood-guarding durations."

 **Reference:**

 Catry, P., Phillips, R.A., Forster, I.P., Matias, R., Lecoq, M., Granadeiro, J.P. & Strange, I.J.  2010.  Brood-guarding duration in black-browed albatrosses *Thalassarche melanophris*: temporal, geographical and individual variation.  *Journal of Avian Biology* 41: 460-469. [http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1600-048X.2010.05029.x/abstract](http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1600-048X.2010.05029.x/abstract)

 *John Cooper, ACAP Information Officer, 7 November 2010*
