Egg Characteristics of Female Common Terns Are Repeatable, and Vary With Maternal Age and Laying Order
Coraline Bichet, Maria Moiron, Nathalie Kürten, Oscar Vedder, Sandra Bouwhuis

TL;DR
Female common terns consistently lay eggs with similar traits, and these traits change with the mother's age and laying order.
Contribution
This study reveals high repeatability of egg traits in common terns and links them to maternal age and laying order.
Findings
Egg traits like size and spottiness are highly repeatable within and across clutches of the same female.
Older females lay larger and spottier eggs, and spottier-egg producers disappear over time.
Egg size and shape vary with laying order within a clutch.
Abstract
Avian eggs exhibit striking variability in size, shape, colour, and maculation, not only among but also within species. Technical and analytical advances in image analysis offer the opportunity to understand the factors underpinning this variability, especially when individual‐based longitudinal data are available. Making use of such data, collected over four years, we investigated sources of variation in eight egg characteristics capturing the colour, spottiness, shape, and size of 1589 eggs from 687 clutches produced by 330 female common terns ( Sterna hirundo ) of known age. We found a high repeatability of the eight egg traits, both within clutches (range 0.48–0.77), and among clutches of the same female laid in different years (range 0.48–0.73). We also observed a within‐female increase in egg size and spottiness with age, and evidence for selective disappearance of females…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAvian ecology and behavior · Animal Behavior and Reproduction · Animal Nutrition and Physiology
