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Dive into the research topics where Craig A. Barnett is active.

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Featured researches published by Craig A. Barnett.


Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology | 2007

Energetic state and the performance of dawn chorus in silvereyes ( Zosterops lateralis )

Craig A. Barnett; James V. Briskie

Stochastic dynamic programming (SDP) models predict that males singing to attract a mate should concentrate singing in what has been termed the dawn chorus. This is because male birds should have a variable surplus of fat in the morning that can be used to fuel singing, with the amount of fat available dependent upon such factors as his quality, foraging success and risk of predation. In this manner, the dawn chorus can act as an indicator of male quality in the context of female mate choice. We test a key prediction of SDP models of singing behaviour that males with greater fat levels should sing more. We conducted an experiment where we recorded the dawn chorus of male silvereyes (Zosterops lateralis) on three consecutive days. Each male received supplementary food on the second day, which enabled us to sample his dawn chorus before, during and after food supplementation. We also collected data on the effect of supplementary food on the body mass of silvereyes. As predicted by SDP models, we found that silvereyes sang for a greater proportion of the time after receiving supplementary food. Supplementary food also had a significant effect on the complexity of a male song, indicating that males not only increased the quantity of their song but also the quality of their song when they received extra food. As the provision of supplementary food significantly increased the mass of fed birds, our results support a causal link between male energy reserves and his ability to perform the dawn chorus.


Animal Behaviour | 2011

Turning a deaf ear: a test of the manipulating androgens hypothesis in house wrens

Craig A. Barnett; Sandrine G. Clairardin; Charles F. Thompson; Scott K. Sakaluk

The manipulating androgens hypothesis (MAH) proposes that female birds increase the level of testosterone (T) in their eggs to promote greater offspring begging, and thereby elicit increased provisioning by their mates. We examined the effect of a positive in ovo manipulation of T on provisioning by house wren, Troglodytes aedon, parents, and concomitantly examined the begging response of nestlings. We also examined the mass of nestlings throughout their growth to assess the effect of T on their development, and three measures of nest performance: hatching success, nestling survival and the proportion of nestlings that fledged. Nestlings hatching from T-injected eggs begged more than nestlings hatching from control (oil-injected) eggs early in the nestling period, but not later in the nestling period. However, treatment had no effect on the levels of parental provisioning or nestling mass gain, nor any effect on hatching success or nestling survival. There was a significant increase in parental provisioning rate, but a decline in the size of prey taken to the nest over the course of the breeding season, which was likely the result of declining environmental quality. Our results support neither the MAH, nor the expectation that nestlings should grow at different rates in relation to in ovo titres of T.


Journal of Evolutionary Biology | 2010

Give 'til it hurts: trade-offs between immunity and male reproductive effort in the decorated cricket, Gryllodes sigillatus

Susan N. Gershman; Craig A. Barnett; Adam M. Pettinger; Carie B. Weddle; John Hunt; Scott K. Sakaluk

Trade‐offs between life‐history variables can be manifested at either the phenotypic or genetic level, with vastly different evolutionary consequences. Here, we examined whether male decorated crickets (Gryllodes sigillatus) from eight inbred lines and the outbred founder population from which they were derived, trade‐off immune effort [lytic activity, phenoloxidase (PO) activity or encapsulation] to produce spermatophylaxes: costly nuptial food gifts essential for successful sperm transfer. Canonical correlation analysis of the outbred population revealed a trade‐off between spermatophylax mass and lytic activity. Analysis of our inbred lines, however, revealed that although PO activity, encapsulation, body mass, spermatophylax mass and ampulla (sperm capsule) mass were all highly heritable, lytic activity was not, and there was, therefore, no negative genetic correlation between lytic activity and spermatophylax mass. Thus, males showed a phenotypic but not a genetic trade‐off between spermatophylax mass and lytic activity, suggesting that this trade‐off is mediated largely by environmental factors.


Heredity | 2010

Inbred decorated crickets exhibit higher measures of macroparasitic immunity than outbred individuals

Susan N. Gershman; Craig A. Barnett; Adam M. Pettinger; Carie B. Weddle; John Hunt; Scott K. Sakaluk

Inbreeding is assumed to have negative effects on fitness, including the reduced ability to withstand immune challenges. We examined the immunological consequences of inbreeding in decorated crickets, Gryllodes sigillatus, by comparing lytic activity, phenoloxidase (PO) activity, and encapsulation ability of crickets from eight inbred lines with that of crickets from the outbred founder population. Surprisingly, crickets from inbred lines had a greater encapsulation ability compared with crickets from the outbred population. We suggest that because inbred crickets have reduced reproductive effort, they may, therefore, have the option of devoting more resources to this form of immunity than outbred individuals. We also found that both inbred and outbred females had higher immunity than males in PO activity and implant darkness. This result supports the hypothesis that females should devote more effort to somatic maintenance and immunity than males. PO activity and implant darkness were heritable in both males and females, but lytic activity was only heritable in females. Males and females differed in the heritability of, and genetic correlations among, immune traits, suggesting that differences in selective pressures on males and females may have resulted in a sexual conflict over optimal immune trait values.


Biology Letters | 2014

Better the devil you know: avian predators find variation in prey toxicity aversive

Craig A. Barnett; Melissa Bateson; Candy Rowe

Toxic prey that signal their defences to predators using conspicuous warning signals are called ‘aposematic’. Predators learn about the toxic content of aposematic prey and reduce their attacks on them. However, through regulating their toxin intake, predators will include aposematic prey in their diets when the benefits of gaining the nutrients they contain outweigh the costs of ingesting the preys toxins. Predators face a problem when managing their toxin intake: prey sharing the same warning signal often vary in their toxicities. Given that predators should avoid uncertainty when managing their toxin intake, we tested whether European starlings (Sturnus vulgaris) preferred to eat fixed-defence prey (where all prey contained a 2% quinine solution) to mixed-defence prey (where half the prey contained a 4% quinine solution and the other half contained only water). Our results support the idea that predators should be more ‘risk-averse’ when foraging on variably defended prey and suggest that variation in toxicity levels could be a form of defence.


The Journal of Experimental Biology | 2011

Experimentally increased in ovo testosterone leads to increased plasma bactericidal activity and decreased cutaneous immune response in nestling house wrens.

Sandrine G. Clairardin; Craig A. Barnett; Scott K. Sakaluk; Charles F. Thompson

SUMMARY Maternally derived testosterone in the eggs of birds may benefit nestlings by increasing various aspects of their growth, condition and behavioral development, but these benefits may come at a cost, including suppression of immune responsiveness. Experiments on a variety of species in which in ovo levels of testosterone have been experimentally increased have produced mixed results; some have found increased growth and suppressed immune function of nestlings whereas others have found the opposite. In an attempt to clarify the relationship between in ovo testosterone and nestling size, mass, health state and immune responsiveness, we experimentally increased levels of testosterone in the eggs of house wrens (Troglodytes aedon). We simultaneously determined the size, mass, hematocrit (a measure of health state), cutaneous immune response to phytohaemagglutinin and plasma bactericidal activity of nestlings near the time of fledging. We predicted that nestlings hatching from testosterone-injected eggs would exhibit lower immune responsiveness, but achieve greater mass, size and condition, than nestlings hatching from vehicle-injected control eggs. Instead, we found that nestlings hatching from testosterone-injected eggs had a weaker cutaneous immune response but greater bactericidal activity than those hatching from control eggs. They did not, however, differ significantly in mass, size or hematocrit from controls. These results suggest that experimentally increased in ovo testosterone induced a trade-off between bactericidal activity and the cutaneous immune response. The opposite responses by two different measures of immune function to experimentally increased in ovo testosterone underscore the importance of including multiple immune assays when investigating the potential for trade-offs with the immune system and other physiological functions.


Mammal Study | 2013

Observations of Predation Attempts on Avian Nest Boxes by Japanese Martens (Martes Melampus)

Craig A. Barnett; Norimasa Sugita; Toshitaka N. Suzuki

Predation is an important biological factor, which influ-ences animal populations (see Newton 1998 for a review). Observations of natural predatory events are imperative for understanding the effects of this selective pressure on the survival and reproductive success of animal popula-tions (Clutton-Brock 1988). Yet, despite the pervasive effects of predation, observations of natural predatory events are rare in the study of animal ecology.In many environments, avian nests may face different risks posed by multiple types of predators (e.g., birds, mammals, and reptiles). In Japan, small passerines may have their nests depredated by a wide variety of predators such as Jungle crows (


Behavioral Ecology | 2007

State-dependent decision making: educated predators strategically trade off the costs and benefits of consuming aposematic prey

Craig A. Barnett; Melissa Bateson; Candy Rowe


Behavioral Ecology | 2012

Educated predators make strategic decisions to eat defended prey according to their toxin content

Craig A. Barnett; John Skelhorn; Melissa Bateson; Candy Rowe


Ethology | 2012

Aggressiveness, Boldness and Parental Food Provisioning in Male House Wrens (Troglodytes aedon)

Craig A. Barnett; Charles F. Thompson; Scott K. Sakaluk

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Carie B. Weddle

Illinois State University

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