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Growth and food requirement flexibility in captive chicks of the European barn owl (Tyto alba)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 April 2001

J. M. Durant
Affiliation:
Centre d'Ecologie et Physiologie Energétiques, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, F-67087 Strasbourg Cedex 02, France; e-mail: handrich@c-strasbourg.fr
Y. Handrich
Affiliation:
Centre d'Ecologie et Physiologie Energétiques, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, F-67087 Strasbourg Cedex 02, France; e-mail: handrich@c-strasbourg.fr
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Abstract

The growth and the food requirements of the European barn owl (Tyto alba) were studied in three groups of captive chicks. One group of chicks, raised in ad libitum food conditions by their parents, was used to measure body mass and linear growth of a number of structural body components at their characteristic growth rate. A second group of chicks, hand-raised with food ad libitum until fledging, was used to measure food requirement at the characteristic growth rate. A third group, hand-raised with restricted feeding, was used to specify the plasticity of growth and food requirements still compatible with a normal development at fledging. Chicks of both sexes of the first two groups experienced an overshoot in body mass (maximum of 391 g) when approximately 40 days old, followed by a decrease (to a mass of 314 g) until fledging at 60 days old, giving a mass distribution with age in the form of a bell-shaped curve. The daily food intake also showed a bell-shaped curve with a peak value of 80 ± 10 g of fresh mice/day when the body mass was maximum. The decrease of food intake preceding fledging was spontaneous. The average daily food intake was 67 ± 17 g/day between the ages of 20 and 60 days. In the restricted feeding group, however, the same timing for linear growth and fledging was achieved with a 17% reduction of daily food intake. For the same fledging body mass as the ad libitum fed group, there was a flattening of the body mass curve. The significance of the overshoot in body mass and food intake is discussed in terms of the chick's and brood's advantages and in terms of parental investment in this species with hatching asynchrony.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 1998 The Zoological Society of London

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