New Paper: How avian incubation behaviour influences egg surface temperatures: relationships with egg position, development and clutch size

A new paper involving Environment Institute members Rebecca Boulton (an honorary senior research fellow) and has recently been publihed in the .

The paper, titled explains the results of a study of the great tit Parus major, a species with a large clutch size, to investigate surface cooling rates of individual eggs within the nest cup across a range of ambient temperatures in a field situation. The study used state-of-the-art portable infrared imaging and digital photography, testing for associations between egg surface temperature (and rate of cooling) and a combination of egg specific (mass, shape, laying order, position within clutch) and incubation specific (clutch size, ambient temperature, day of incubation) variables.

to find out about the results.
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