Search results for "Brood"

showing 10 items of 114 documents

Food availability and the male's role in parental care in double-brooded TreecreepersCerthia familiaris

1996

The aim of this work was to examine differences in paternal and maternal care in a double-brooded, monogamous species, the Treecreeper Certhia familiaris, in relation to food availability. As a measure of parental care, we recorded the hourly feeding activity of parents when the nestlings from their first and second breeding attempts were 7 and 12 days old. Feeding frequency of the first brood increased with the age of the nestlings and also with the brood size when 12 days old. While the feeding activities of the females were similar with respect to the first and second broods, the males were less active and failed to provide any food to their nestlings in 15 cases out of 28 second broods.…

biologyFood availabilityEcologyCerthia familiarisbiology.organism_classificationBroodAltricialFood supplybehavior and behavior mechanismsSeasonal breederAnimal Science and ZoologyTreecreeperPaternal carereproductive and urinary physiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsDemographyIbis
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Dazzled and confused? Habituation and sensitization in free-living Yellow Warblers

2004

brood parasitism coevolutionary adaptation habituation yellow warbler brown-headed cowbird
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Cowbird versus cuckoo hosts: a comparative study of learned nest defense

2005

One of the best example of coevolutionaru adaptations is that of the interactions between avian brood parasites and their hosts. Brood parasites lay their eggs in nests of other specieis and leave the job of caring for their young with the hosts. Hosts of brood parasites tend to suffer high reproductive costs as often they raise few of no young of their own, an effect of being parasitizes. For this reason, many hosts have evolved strategies that reduces the cost of parasitism.

brood parasitism common cucckoo brown-headed cowbird nest defence coevolutionary mechanisms
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Social transmission in avian brood parasitism systems

Obligate brood parasites lay all of their eggs in nests of other species, leaving the burden of parental care entirely to the hosts. As a consequence of being parasitized, hosts’ reproductive success is often reduced. This strategy has triggered a coevolutionary dynamic involving behavioural, physiological and morphological adaptations and counter-adaptations from the two players, whose conflicting functions are to successfully parasitize a nest, and prevent or reduce the negative effects of parasitism. In parasite systems studied in the New and Old worlds, warbler hosts exhibited different degrees of learning antiparasite defences from conspecifics. By quantifying strength and direction of…

brood parasitism social transmission information
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Analysis of Prey Composition in Eurasian Reed Warblers' Acrocephalus scirpaceus Droppings at Four Breeding Sites in Italy

2022

Our aim was to investigate the among-populations diversity of prey composition in Eurasian Reed Warblers’ diets via their droppings, both to assess the ecological validity of this sampling method and to test whether the prey species most abundant in fecal samples were also the most present in the Italian study site. We collected fecal samples at four sites throughout Italy, for a total of 144 samples. Within reedbeds, the breeding habitat of the Eurasian Reed Warbler, we also collected arthropods by carrying out entomological sweepings at one of the study sites. Within the fecal samples, we identified dozens of prey species, belonging mainly to Araneae, Coleoptera, Diptera, Hymenoptera and …

insectivorous birdbird droppingsEcologyEurasian Reed WarblerEcological Modelingavian brood parasitismdiet compositionornithologyentomologyAgricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)avian brood parasitism; bird droppings; diet composition; entomology; Eurasian Reed Warbler; insectivorous bird; ornithologyNature and Landscape Conservation
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Diverse societies are more productive: a lesson from ants

2012

The fitness consequences of animal personalities (also known as behavioural syndromes) have recently been studied in several solitary species. However, the adaptive significance of collective personalities in social insects and especially of behavioural variation among group members remains largely unexplored. Although intracolonial behavioural variation is an important component of division of labour, and as such a key feature for the success of societies, empirical links between behavioural variation and fitness are scarce. We investigated aggression, exploration and brood care behaviour in Temnothorax longispinosus ant colonies. We focused on two distinct aspects: intercolonial variabil…

media_common.quotation_subjectEfficiencyBiologyPersonality psychologyGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyDevelopmental psychologymedicineAnimalsPersonalitySocial BehaviorResearch ArticlesGeneral Environmental Sciencemedia_commonBehavior AnimalGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyAntsAggressionGeneral MedicineTemnothorax longispinosusAnt colonyAggressionVariation (linguistics)Brood caremedicine.symptomGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesSocial psychologyDivision of labourProceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
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Gene expression is stronger associated with behaviour than with age and fertility in ant workers

2018

AbstractThe ecological success of social insects is based on division of labour, not only between queens and workers, but also among workers. Whether a worker tends the brood or forages is strongly influenced by age, fertility and nutritional status, with brood carers being younger, more fecund and corpulent. Here, we experimentally disentangle behaviour from age and fertility inTemnothorax longispinosusant workers and analyse how these parameters are linked to whole-body gene expression. Our transcriptome analysis reveals four times more genes associated with behaviour than with age and only few fertility-associated genes. Brood carers exhibited an upregulation of genes involved in lipid b…

media_common.quotation_subjectfungiNutritional statusFertilityBiologyANTBroodTranscriptomeLipid biosynthesisGene expressionbehavior and behavior mechanismsDivision of labourreproductive and urinary physiologyDemographymedia_common
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Data from: Collective defence portfolios of ant hosts shift with social parasite pressure

2014

Host defences become increasingly costly as parasites breach successive lines of defence. Because selection favours hosts that successfully resist parasitism at the lowest possible cost, escalating coevolutionary arms races are likely to drive host defence portfolios towards ever more expensive strategies. We investigated the interplay between host defence portfolios and social parasite pressure by comparing 17 populations of two Temnothorax ant species. When successful, collective aggression not only prevents parasitation but also spares host colonies the cost of searching for and moving to a new nest site. However, once parasites breach the host's nest defence, host colonies should resort…

medicine and health carehost-parasite interactionsProtomognathus americanussocial insectsTemnothorax curvispinosusbrood parasitesdefence portfoliosMedicineTemnothorax longispinosusLife sciencesfrontline defences
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No evidence for associations between brood size, gut microbiome diversity and survival in great tit (Parus major) nestlings

2022

Abstract Background The gut microbiome forms at an early stage, yet data on the environmental factors influencing the development of wild avian microbiomes is limited. As the gut microbiome is a vital part of organismal health, it is important to understand how it may connect to host performance. The early studies with wild gut microbiome have shown that the rearing environment may be of importance in gut microbiome formation, yet the results vary across taxa, and the effects of specific environmental factors have not been characterized. Here, wild great tit (Parus major) broods were manipulated to either reduce or enlarge the original brood soon after hatching. We investigated if brood siz…

mikrobistobrood sizesuolistogut microbiomelinnutGeneral Medicine16S rRNA genetalitiainenavian microbiomeparus major
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Mechanisms of refinement of avian nest defence behaviour

2003

nest defence brood parasitism yellow warbler brown-headed cowbird coevolutionary process
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