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Luteinizing Hormone and the Hastening of Sexual Maturity in the American Kestrel, Falco SparveriusMuir, Meloni Mary January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
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Cryopreservation of semen of the American kestrel Falco sparveriusBrock, M. Kelly. January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
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Cryopreservation of semen of the American kestrel Falco sparveriusBrock, M. Kelly. January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
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The effects of O,P'-dicofol on two generations of American kestrels /MacLellan, Kelly N. M. (Kelly Nadine Mary) January 1994 (has links)
A two generation laboratory study was conducted on a captive population of American kestrels (Falco sparverius) to investigate the possible teratogenic effects of the pesticide Dicofol. Paired females were exposed to three levels of Dicofol. Integrity of the reproductive tract of the resulting embryos were examined. Viable eggs were hatched and these birds were permitted to breed the following year. Breeding performance for these birds was measured based on their ability to form pair bonds and exhibit normal behaviour in the presence of a mate. Clutch completion, fertility, hatchability and number of hatchlings reared to fledging were used as reproductive parameters. Females dosed with 20 ppm Dicofol laid eggs that were significantly (p $<$ 0.05) thinner than eggs of control birds. Male embryos from dosed females were significantly (p $<$ 0.05) different from control chicks. Feminization was confirmed by the presence of primordial germ cells. Second generation adults showed altered reproductive parameters related to their parental dose groups. / Rank-order trials were conducted on second generation males based on parental dose levels to determine the aggressiveness of these individuals when placed in a competitive arena. Primary perch sites and food items were obtained by control birds significantly (p $<$ 0.05) more often than exposed males.
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The effects of O,P'-dicofol on two generations of American kestrels /MacLellan, Kelly N. M. (Kelly Nadine Mary) January 1994 (has links)
No description available.
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The Effects of Sodium Flouride on the Reproductive Performance of the Male American kestrel (Falco sparverius) and the Japanese quail (Cotumix japonica)Shutt, Laird January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
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Copulatory behaviour and paternity in solitary- and colony-nesting kestrelsVillarroel, Morris Ricardo. January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
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Copulatory behaviour and paternity in solitary- and colony-nesting kestrelsVillarroel, Morris Ricardo. January 1996 (has links)
In this thesis, I analysed the mating behaviour of the solitary-nesting American kestrel (Falco sparverius) in southern Quebec (Canada) and the colony-nesting lesser kestrel (F. naumanni) in Aragon (Spain). DNA fingerprinting of 26 families of lesser kestrels revealed that 3.4% of nestlings were extra-pair, which may have arisen through either extra-pair copulation or mate replacement. Two nestlings in two different nests were also the result of intraspecific brood parasitism. DNA fingerprinting of 21 American kestrel families showed that all the nestlings in two nests were extra-pair (10% extra-pair young overall), most probably due to mate replacement. / I analysed the mating behaviour of both species in two studies with a similar aim, i.e. to test why mated pairs copulate so frequently. Sixteen pairs of wild American kestrels and 12 pairs of "solitary" lesser kestrels (14 nests per 0.3 km$ sp2)$ were analysed in terms of four hypotheses that explain high frequency of within-pair copulations both outside and during the fertile period. First the Paternity Assurance Hypothesis, i.e. males control timing and frequency of copulations to best assure fertilization, was rejected because extra-pair copulation attempts were low in both species ($<$1% of all copulations observed), within-pair copulation frequencies did not increase with nest density in the lesser kestrel, and copulation and mate attendance did not increase as the fertile period approached. Second, the Immediate Material Benefits Hypothesis, i.e. females trade copulations for food, was refuted because copulation most often occurred without food transfers. Third, the Female Mate-Guarding of Males Hypothesis, i.e. females distract their mates from other mating opportunities by copulating frequently, was rejected because male loss was low, males and females solicited similar amounts of copulations, and females did not differ in the timing or frequency of solicitations. Finally, the Mate Assessment Hypothesis, i.e. assessment of mate quality is mediated by copulation, most closely predicted the behaviour observed since within-pair copulation was high outside the fertile period and during pair formation in both species.
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