Data and code from: Ecological and Life-History Correlates of Incubation Attentiveness Differ between Uniparentally and Biparentally Incubating Passerine Birds
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https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Data_and_code_from_Parental_Incubation_Mode_Mediates_Incubation_Attentiveness_Across_Ecological_and_Life-History_Trait_Gradients_in_Passerine_Birds/29949704/2
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This dataset includes the file "ATT_data.csv" and "R_code_for_analyses.R".<b>In ATT_data.csv:</b>Species: The scientific name of each species.Family: Family name.Daytime_constancy: Daytime nest attentiveness of each study population of each species (%).Amb_temp: Mean ambient temperature during the main incubation months (°C).Longitude: Longitude of each study population.Latitude: Latitude of each study population.IncubationMode: Incubation mode of each species (uni: uniparental; bi: biparental).Ref_Inc_data: References to sources of incubation data.Nest_type: Nest type of each species.Ref_Nest_type: References to sources of nest type data.Body_mass: Adult body mass of each species (g).Ref_Body_mass: References to sources of adult body mass data.Clutch_size: Clutch size of each species.Ref_Clutch_size: References to sources of clutch size data.<br>MethodsOur incubation data were primarily sourced from four comparative studies that explicitly reported daytime incubation attentiveness or incubation rhythm (mean on- and off-bout durations during daytime, i.e., the time spent on and off the nest), which covered 426 of the total 466 populations in our dataset (Matysioková et al. 2011; Matysioková and Remeš 2013; Matysioková and Remeš 2018; Austin et al. 2019); additional supplementation of the data was conducted based on other published literature (see our dataset for more information). For uniparentally incubating species, where only incubation rhythm data (i.e., mean on- and off-bout durations) were reported (e.g., data from Matysioková and Remeš 2018), we estimated daytime incubation attentiveness using the formula: [mean on-bout duration / (mean on-bout duration + mean off-bout duration)], following Matysioková and Remeš (2014) who demonstrated a high positive correlation between this estimate and direct measurements. However, for biparentally incubating species, where both parents usually attend incubation alternatively, and thus the average on- and off-bout durations of males and females cannot be used to calculate the daytime incubation attentiveness, only studies that directly reported daytime incubation attentiveness were included.As a proxy for parental incubation investment, daytime incubation attentiveness was calculated as the proportion of total daytime hours that any parent bird spends in incubating, which represented the fraction of available time devoted to incubation rather than the absolute total time spent incubating during daytime. Since we aimed to assess the balance between parental incubation and self-maintenance activities (e.g., foraging and rest for maintaining their own condition), this metric is appropriate for interpopulation comparisons.From the collected studies, we extracted available data on average daytime incubation attentiveness, incubation mode, mean ambient temperature during main incubation months, and study site coordinates for each population. However, some studies did not provide data of mean ambient temperature during the main incubation months (e.g., Matysioková and Remeš 2013). In these cases (in 67 of the total 466 populations in our dataset), we followed the approach of Matysioková and Remeš (2018) to estimate the missing values. To do this, we first extracted the geographic coordinates of the study location from the source literature. If they were not provided, we located the field site on Google Earth and used the central coordinates of the region. We then obtained the study year and the primary months of incubation and extracted mean monthly temperatures using the updated CRU TS3.21 climate dataset (0.5° resolution; Harris et al. 2014).Data on nest structure were primarily obtained from Medina et al. (2022), following their classification of nests into open, domed, and cavity types. Given the small sample sizes of biparentally incubating species building domed or cavity nests (Table 1), and their better thermal buffering capacities compared to open nests (Mainwaring et al. 2014; Martin et al. 2017), we first combined domed and cavity nests into the category of enclosed nests for analyses (see below). However, as a supplement to our results, we also re-ran all the analyses by separating nest structures into open, domed, and cavity categories (see also Statistical Analyses section). Data on clutch size and adult body mass were mainly obtained from Székely et al. (2022). Other missing life-history data were supplemented from Birds of the World (birdsoftheworld.org) and other published literature (see our dataset for details).
提供机构:
Xu, Jiliang; Hu, Qian; Li, Jianqiang
创建时间:
2025-12-23



