0000000000802180

AUTHOR

Matti Halonen

showing 2 related works from this author

Responses of Male and Female Black Grouse to Male Vocal Display

2010

The evolution of leks may be explained by several hypotheses. The ‘female preference’ hypothesis, which states that females favour males that have aggregated, has recently gained some empirical support. Low-quality, unattractive males may, however, settle near attractive males, as predicted by the ‘hotshot’ hypothesis. We tested whether black grouse Tetrao tetrix females use auditory cues to find the preferred leks, and whether males respond to vocal display emitted on leks. We conducted a playback experiment with male vocal display (rookooing) on leks, where the visiting females and displaying males were counted. The number of males tended to increase more on playback leks. Specifically, t…

biologyAnimal Science and ZoologyTetraoBlack grousebiology.organism_classificationSocial psychologyChoice testEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsYoung maleVisual contactDemographyEthology
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Younger bank voles are more vulnerable to avian predation

2008

The importance of predation on prey populations is mainly determined by the number of eaten prey. However, the total impact of predation might also be determined by the selection of certain prey individuals, e.g., different sexes or age categories. Here we tested selective predation by an avian predator, the pygmy owl ( Glaucidium passerinum (L., 1758)), on bank voles ( Myodes ( Clethrionomys ) glareolus (Schreber, 1780)). We compared the sex, age, and mass of hoarded prey with the animals snap-trapped from the field. There were no differences in the sex ratio between hoarded bank voles and those available in the field. However, hoarded voles were significantly younger than ones in the fie…

Pygmy owlForage (honey bee)HabitatEcologySignificant differenceAnimal Science and ZoologyGlaucidium passerinumBiologybiology.organism_classificationPredatorEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSex ratioPredationCanadian Journal of Zoology
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