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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Food Caching By Willow and Crested Tits: A Test of Scatterhoarding Models

Simo JokinenJukka Suhonen

subject

WillowbiologyFood storingEcologySeed dispersalmedia_common.quotation_subjectParus cristatusbiology.organism_classificationCompetition (biology)Parus montanusFlockEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsHoarding (animal behavior)media_common

description

In coniferous forests of Central Finland, Willow (Parus montanus) and Crest- ed Tits (P. cristatus) store seeds in a scattered distribution within their territory during the autumn. Individuals cache and recover food items while moving together as members of mixed-species flocks. The purpose of this study was to test certain predictions of scatter- hoarding models (Stapanian and Smith 1978, Clarkson et al. 1986), which predict how the animal should hoard food items from a superabundant source to maximize the number of caches recovered. Our field experiments gave support to most of the predictions of the models. Individual tits stored seeds closer to the food source when food had been available for first time (new feeder with seeds not previously available) than to feeders with seed available for 1 mo. Individual birds of both species carried large food items (hulled sun- flower seeds) farther than small items (spruce seeds) before caching them. Crested Tits distributed their caches uniformly around the feeder while most of the Willow Tits favored certain sectors around the feeder. Subdominant individuals carried seeds the same distances as did dominant birds when the food source was ephemeral, but farther from a continuously available food source.

https://doi.org/10.2307/1939354