From cd0af969abdfc3e4f2f17dda90eb5a8b834a6a15 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Corina Logan Date: Sat, 22 Sep 2018 17:58:09 -0700 Subject: [PATCH] formatting --- g_causal.Rmd | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/g_causal.Rmd b/g_causal.Rmd index 42fb848c..43527a4b 100644 --- a/g_causal.Rmd +++ b/g_causal.Rmd @@ -289,7 +289,7 @@ Logan anticipates that she will want to run additional/different analyses after ###F. PLANNED SAMPLE -Great-tailed grackles will be caught in the wild in Tempe, Arizona USA for individual identification (colored leg bands in unique combinations). Some individuals (~32: ~16 per experiment) will be brought temporarily into aviaries for testing, and then they will be released back to the wild. Grackles are individually housed in an aviary (each 244cm long by 122cm wide by 213cm tall) at Arizona State University for a maximum of three months where they have ad lib access to water at all times and are fed Mazuri Small Bird maintenance diet ad lib during non-testing hours (minimum 20h per day), and various other food items (e.g., peanuts, grapes, bread) during testing (up to 3h per day per bird). Individuals are given three to four days to habituate to the aviaries and then their test battery begins on the fourth or fifth day (birds are tested six days per week, therefore if their fourth day in the aviaries occurs on a day off, then they are tested on the fifth day instead). +Great-tailed grackles will be caught in the wild in Tempe, Arizona USA for individual identification (colored leg bands in unique combinations). Some individuals (~32: ~16 per experiment) will be brought temporarily into aviaries for testing, and then they will be released back to the wild. Grackles are individually housed in an aviary (each 244cm long by 122cm wide by 213cm tall) at Arizona State University for a maximum of three months where they have ad lib access to water at all times and are fed Mazuri Small Bird maintenance diet ad lib during non-testing hours (minimum 20h per day), and various other food items (e.g., peanuts, grapes, bread) during testing (up to 3h per day per bird). Individuals are given three to four days to habituate to the aviaries and then their test battery begins on the fourth or fifth day (birds are usually tested six days per week, therefore if their fourth day in the aviaries occurs on a day off, then they are tested on the fifth day instead). **Sample size rationale**