6533b832fe1ef96bd129a3cd

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Across and Within-Forest Effects on Breeding Success in Mediterranean Great TitsParus major

Emilio BarbaJosé Luis GreñoEduardo J. BeldaMarcel E. VisserLeonard J. M. HollemanFrancisco Atiénzar

subject

Avian clutch sizeParusDeciduousNestReproductive successHabitatEcologyAfforestationAnimal Science and ZoologyVegetationBiologybiology.organism_classificationEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics

description

Forest type and habitat structure can have profound effects on different aspects of avian life histories. These effects may, however, strongly differ across and within forests that vary in vegetation composition and structure, especially when an ancient forest has been replaced by a new forest. To test for these differences in effect, we studied Great Tit Parus major life-history traits (280 first clutches) in two Mediterranean evergreen forests during 2005–07: an ancient Holm Oak Quercus ilex and a reforested pine forest. A comparison between forests revealed that females breeding in the Holm Oak forest started laying one week later, and produced larger clutches and broods both at hatching and at fledging. Chicks raised in the Holm Oak forest also fledged in better condition. Within forests, however, the reproductive success was not higher for pairs breeding in nestboxes surrounded by oaks within the pine forest, and also reproductive success was not lower in nestboxes surrounded by pines within oak forest. Instead, vegetation maturity around nestboxes, rather than tree species composition, affected hatching success. Surprisingly, hatching success was higher in nestboxes surrounded by immature vegetation. We suggest that this may be due to a lower nest predation rate in nestboxes surrounded by immature vegetation, compared to nestboxes surrounded by mature vegetation. We suggest that different factors appear to affect variation in breeding success in Mediterranean Great Tits comparing across forests (e.g. food availability) vs. within a forest (e.g. nest predation).

https://doi.org/10.5253/078.098.0110