| Literature DB >> 28584728 |
Camillo Sandri1, Vittoria Vallarin2, Carolina Sammarini1, Barbara Regaiolli3, Alessandra Piccirillo4, Caterina Spiezio3.
Abstract
In the last years, studies on captive greater flamingos have increased. Research on zoo animals is important to improve the knowledge on these species and to improve their ex-situ and in-situ conservation. The aim of the present study was to investigate the parental behaviour of a captive colony of greater flamingo hosted at Parco Natura Viva, an Italian zoological garden, to improve the knowledge on this species in zoos. In particular, the present study investigated and compared the parental care of females and males in 35 breeding pairs of greater flamingos. For each pair, we collected durations of parental care behaviour of both females and males, recording their position in relation to the nest (near the nest, on the nest, away from the nest) and individual and social behaviours performed. First, both partners were involved in parental care and displayed species-specific behaviours reported in the wild. The main results were that males spent more time than females on the nest (P = 0.010) and near it (P = 0.0001) and were more aggressive toward other flamingos than females, both when sitting on the nest (P = 0.003) and when near the nest (P = 0.0003). Therefore, male flamingos seem to be more involved in incubation duties and nest protection than females. This kind of research is important not only to expand the knowledge on bird species such as flamingos, but also to improve their husbandry and breeding in controlled environment. Indeed, understanding animal behaviour allows us to gain insights into their individual and social needs, addressing potential animal welfare issues.Entities:
Keywords: Greater flamingo; Incubation; Parental care; Sex differences; Zoo
Year: 2017 PMID: 28584728 PMCID: PMC5452960 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.3404
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Behavioural ethogram of the study.
For each behavioural category collected in the study the table reports the name and definition.
| Behavioural categories | |
|---|---|
| Agonistic behaviour | During nesting, a flamingo extends the neck and peck at another bird or performs threatening displays, particularly neck hooking and swaying ( |
| Incubation | A flamingo is incubating the egg, keeping it warm with the body heat. This behaviour is performed when the flamingo is sitting on the nest. |
| Comfort behaviour | A flamingo is self-preening (trimming or dressing the own feathers with the beak), stretching (drawing out/extending legs or wings) or scratching the neck with one leg ( |
| Egg care | A flamingo is looking at the egg or rolling and moving the egg carefully ( |
| Nest-building | A flamingo looks for mud, soil and sand and picks them up to renovate or repair the nest ( |
| Sleeping | A flamingo rests with the head under the wing. Sleeping can be performed when the flamingo is near the nest or sitting on the nest. |
| Other | A flamingo performs a behaviour that is not directly associated with parental care and is not listed above. This behavioural category can be performed when the flamingo is near the nest. |
Figure 1Box and whisker plot of the time spent (seconds) by flamingo partners near the nest.
The horizontal lines within the box indicate the medians, boundaries of the box indicate the 25th and 75th percentile and the whiskers indicate the minimum and maximum values of the data samples. Outliers are drawn as points.
Figure 2Box and whisker plot of the time spent (seconds) by flamingo partners on the nest.
The horizontal lines within the box indicate the medians, boundaries of the box indicate the 25th and 75th percentile and the whiskers indicate the minimum and maximum values of the data samples. Outliers are drawn as points.
Figure 3Box and whisker plot of the time spent (seconds) by flamingo partners away from the nest (No Nest).
The horizontal lines within the box indicate the medians, boundaries of the box indicate the 25th and 75th percentile and the whiskers indicate the minimum and maximum values of the data samples. Outliers are drawn as points.
Behavioural categories performed by flamingos near the nest and on the nest (standing and sitting).
The table reports the median (IQR) duration in seconds of each behavioural category performed by females (F) and males (M) when they were near the nest, standing on the nest or sitting on the nest, incubating the egg. The last row reports the median (IQR) duration in seconds of time spent by female and male flamingos in different position.
| Near the nest | On the nest (standing) | On the nest (sitting) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| F | M | F | M | F | M | |
| Agonistic behaviour | 40 (3–105.5) | 187 (40–326) | 11 (0–21) | 8 (0–19) | 545 (375–884) | 921 (637–1105.5) |
| Comfort behaviour | 231 (27–480) | 524 (210–945) | 14 (0–71.5) | 0 (0–24) | 64 (0–165.5) | 59 (4–230.5) |
| Sleeping | 55 (0–434) | 934 (358–1378) | – | – | 67 (0–634) | 319 (0–714.5) |
| Egg care | – | – | 148 (72–239.5) | 172 (99–320) | – | – |
| Incubation | – | – | – | – | 1,650 (1,081–1,895) | 1,995 (1,181–2,578.5) |
| Nest-building | – | – | – | – | 2,336 (1,523–2,956) | 2,791 (2,036–3,469) |
| Other | 255 (71–502) | 1,093 (432–1,836.5) | – | – | – | – |