Bradley, R. W.McFarlane Tranquilla, L. A.Vanderkist, B. A.Cooke, F.2012-06-222012-06-222002The Condor 104(1):178-183. 2002http://hdl.handle.net/10315/17332We report a significant male bias in dawn and dusk nest visitations of breeding, radio-marked Marbled Murrelets (Brachyramphus marmoratus) during the chick rearing period in Desolation Sound, British Columbia, Canada, from 1998-2000. Overall visitation rates of males during chick rearing were 1.3 times greater than those of females. Dusk visitation rates by males with active nests were 1.8 times greater than those of females. Male visitation rates were similar between early and late chick rearing, both within and among individuals. However, female visitation rates duringl ate chick rearingw ere significantlyl ower than female rates early in rearing, both within and between individuals. In addition, between-sex comparisons of nest visitation during early and late chick rearing showed significant reductions in female effort relative to males, only during late chick rearing. These results suggest that male birds may provision chicks more often than females, especially during the last half of chick rearing. These findings offer a behavioral explanation for the annual male bias of birds flying inland during the chick rearing period at Theodosia Inlet in Desolation Sound from 1994-1999. Although female- biased provisioning has been documented in several species, male-biased provisioning has not been widely reported in other alcids.enBrachyramphus marmoratusBritish Columbiamale biasMarbled Murreletprovisioningradio-telemetrysex ratioSex Differences in Nest Visitation by Chick-Rearing Marbled MurreletsArticlewww.ucpress.eduwww.jstor.org/stable/10.2307/1370355