scholarly journals AN EXPIENCE OF THE LITTLE AUK SEXING (ALLE ALLE LINK) BY THE BEAK OUTLINES

2015 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 47-51
Author(s):  
Andrey Anatolievich Vinogradov

The method of the distant field sexing of the monomorphic birds by the photographs developed initially for the White-winged Tern (Chlidonias leucopterus), turned out to be effective for the monomorphic little auks (Alle alle). Outlines of head and beak of average male and female have been prepared with an aid of Photoshop SC2 from the multiple individual outlines, based on a number of photographs of the birds of know sex (copulating birds), taken from the Internet. Males statistically significant differ from females by the heights of maxilla and mandible at the border of feathers and in the middle of the beak. However, heights cannot be treated as diagnostic due to the extensive zones of overlapping. The truly diagnostic criteria are the ratios (indexes) of the height to each other as well as the values of the discriminant functions of the mentioned ratios. Acquired thus outlines and ratios have been applied to the 49 individuals of the little auks on the photographs. Their sex was known to the examining party, but not to the author. The maximal match of the outlines to the specimen on the photograph showed its possible sex. The subsequent check of the data showed 100% correct sexing. Similar level of the correct sexing has been reached by using the discriminant equations, based both on a number of measurements of the beak (significantly different in the opposite sexes) and the ratios between these measurements, showing the degree of their robustness and expression of certain characters of the beak (gonys, nail, culmen, etc.). The mentioned method is useful not only for the monomorphic species of all the ages and in various seasons, but also for the dimorphic species in the periods, when distant sexing is difficult (non-breeding, juvenile and nestling plumage). About 570 species, studied so far, proved the sensitivity of the sexing method.

Polar Biology ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 37 (5) ◽  
pp. 641-649 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dorota Kidawa ◽  
Katarzyna Wojczulanis-Jakubas ◽  
Dariusz Jakubas ◽  
Rupert Palme ◽  
Lech Stempniewicz ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Mary Jane West-Eberhard

Distinctive male and female traits are perhaps the most familiar of all divergent specializations within species. In cross-sexual transfer, discrete traits that are expressed exclusively in one sex in an ancestral species appear in the opposite sex of descendants. An example is the expression of brood care by males in a lineage where ancestral females are the exclusive caretakers of the young, as in some voles (Thomas and Birney, 1979). Despite the prominence of sexual dimorphism and sex reversals in nature, and an early explicit treatment by Darwin, discussed in the next section, cross-sexual transfer is not often recognized as a major factor in the evolution of novelty (but see, on animals, Mayr, 1963, pp. 435-439; Mayr, 1970, p. 254; on plants, Iltis, 1983). When more widely investigated, cross-sexual transfer may prove to rival heterochrony and duplication as an important source of novelties in sexually dimorphic lineages. For this reason, I devote more attention here to cross-sexual transfer than to these other, well-established general patterns of change. The male and female of a sexually dimorphic species may be so different that it is easy to forget that each individual carries most or all of the genes necessary to produce the phenotype of the opposite sex. Sex determination, like caste determination and other switches between alternative phenotypes, depends on only a few genetic loci or, in many species, environmental factors (Bull, 1983). There is considerable flexibility in sex determination and facultative reversal in some taxa. Among fish, for example, there is even a species wherein sex is determined by juvenile size at a critical age (Francis and Barlow, 1993). The sex determination mechanism, whatever its nature, leads to a series of sex-limited responses, often coordinated by hormones and not necessarily all occurring at once. A distinguishing aspect of sexually dimorphic traits in adults is that there is often a close homology between the secondary sexual traits that are differently modified in the two sexes.


2018 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
pp. 176-184 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruno Schivinski ◽  
Magdalena Brzozowska-Woś ◽  
Erin M. Buchanan ◽  
Mark D. Griffiths ◽  
Halley M. Pontes

Polar Biology ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 38 (8) ◽  
pp. 1203-1212 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katarzyna Wojczulanis-Jakubas ◽  
Dariusz Jakubas ◽  
Olivier Chastel ◽  
Izabela Kulaszewicz

2009 ◽  
Vol 77 (2) ◽  
pp. 433-438 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katarzyna Wojczulanis-Jakubas ◽  
Dariusz Jakubas ◽  
Trond Øigarden ◽  
Jan T. Lifjeld

2004 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 87-112 ◽  
Author(s):  
DAVID BOERTMANN ◽  
PETER LYNGS ◽  
FLEMMING RAVN MERKEL ◽  
ANDERS MOSBECH

The coastal and offshore waters of Southwest Greenland are internationally important winter quarters for seabirds. We crudely estimate a minimum of 3.5 million seabirds using the region in winter, mainly from Arctic Canada, Greenland and Svalbard, with smaller numbers also from Alaska, Iceland, mainland Norway and Russia. The most numerous species are Common Eider Somateria mollissima, King Eider S. spectabilis, Brünnich's Guillemot Uria lomvia and Little Auk Alle alle. The most immediate threat to the seabirds in Southwest Greenland is hunting, and current levels of usage of the Greenland breeding populations of Brünnich's Guillemot and Common Eider are considered unsustainable. Conservation measures are required for these populations.


2012 ◽  
Vol 43 (3) ◽  
pp. 215-226 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zachary W. Brown ◽  
Jorg Welcker ◽  
Ann M. A. Harding ◽  
Wojciech Walkusz ◽  
Nina J. Karnovsky
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