Search results for "Nesting Behavior"

showing 7 items of 47 documents

New behavioural trait adopted or rejected by observing heterospecific tutor fitness

2010

Animals can acquire behaviours from others, including heterospecifics, but should be discriminating in when and whom to copy. Successful individuals should be preferred as tutors, while adopting traits of poorly performing individuals should be actively avoided. Thus far it is unknown if such adaptive strategies are involved when individuals copy other species. Furthermore, rejection of traits based on tutor characteristics (negative bias) has not been shown in any non-human animal. Here we test whether a choice between two new, neutral behavioural alternatives—breeding-sites with alternative geometric symbols—is affected by observing the choice and fitness of a heterospecific tutor. A fiel…

Matching (statistics)Adaptive strategieseducationNicheBiologySocial EnvironmentChoice BehaviorGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyNesting BehaviorDevelopmental psychologyNestAnimalsPasseriformesTUTORResearch ArticlesGeneral Environmental Sciencecomputer.programming_languageGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyGeneral MedicineSocial learningAdaptation PhysiologicalImitative BehaviorTraitta1181FemaleGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencescomputerDiversity (business)Proceeding of the Royal Society B
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Weather impacts on interactions between nesting birds, nest-dwelling ectoparasites and ants.

2022

AbstractWeather has a dominant impact on organisms, including their life histories and interspecific interactions. Yet, for nesting birds, and the arthropods inhabiting bird nests, the direct and cascading effects of weather are poorly known. We explored the influence of ambient temperatures and rainfall on the cohabitation of dome-shaped bird nests by Wood Warblers Phylloscopus sibilatrix, their blowfly Protocalliphora azurea ectoparasites, and predatory Myrmica and Lasius ants that may provide nest sanitation. We sampled blowflies and ants in 129 nests, and measured warbler nestlings during 2018–2020 in the primeval Białowieża Forest, eastern Poland. The probability of ectoparasites occur…

MultidisciplinaryAntsPredatory BehaviorAnimalsPasseriformesForestsWeatherArthropodsEcology and EnvironmentNesting BehaviorScientific reports
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Social phenotype extended to communities: expanded multilevel social selection analysis reveals fitness consequences of interspecific interactions.

2014

In social species, fitness consequences are associated with both individual and social phenotypes. Social selection analysis has quantified the contribution of conspecific social traits to individual fitness. There has been no attempt, however, to apply a social selection approach to quantify the fitness implications of heterospecific social phenotypes. Here, we propose a novel social selection based approach integrating the role of all social interactions at the community level. We extended multilevel selection analysis by including a term accounting for the group phenotype of heterospecifics. We analyzed nest activity as a model social trait common to two species, the lesser kestrel (Falc…

PhenotypeReproductionSettore BIO/05 - ZoologiaAnimalsCoevolution coloniality extended phenotype lesser kestrel jackdaw social selection.Genetic FitnessPasseriformesSelection GeneticSocial BehaviorFalconiformesNesting BehaviorEvolution; international journal of organic evolution
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Range size: Disentangling Current Traits and Phylogenetic and Biogeographic Factors

2006

The range size of a species can be determined by its current traits and by phylogenetic and biogeographic factors. However, only rarely have these factors been studied in combination. We use data on the geographic range sizes of all 26 Sylvia warblers to explicitly test whether range size was determined by current species-specific traits (e.g., body size, dispersal ability), phylogenetic factors (e.g., age of the lineage), or environmental, biogeographic factors (e.g., latitudinal position of the range). The results demonstrated that current traits and phylogenetic and biogeographic factors were interrelated. While a number of factors were significant in simple regression analyses, only one…

Phylogenetic treeGeographyEcologyRange (biology)EcomorphologyLineage (evolution)Regression analysisBiologyEnvironmentNesting BehaviorSongbirdsHoming BehaviorPhylogeneticsBiological dispersalAnimalsBody SizeRegression AnalysisAnimal MigrationRapoport's ruleEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPhylogenyAmerican Naturalist
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Prehatching maternal investment and offspring immunity in the pied flycatcher (Ficedula hypoleuca).

2007

Maternal investment in offspring immunity via egg quality may be an adaptive evolutionary strategy shaped by natural selection. We investigated how maternal investment in eggs can influence offspring immunity by conducting two experiments. First, we manipulated foraging performance of the mothers before egg laying by attaching a small weight to their back feathers. During the nestling period, we investigated offspring total antibody production at the age of 7 days and after antibody challenge, and conducted a partial cross-fostering design to separate the effects of the experiment and rearing-related variation on offspring immunity. In a separate experiment, partial cross-fostering with ant…

SheepbiologyOffspringForagingFicedulaMaternal effectZoologyImmunoglobulinsEnvironmentbiology.organism_classificationImmunity InnateNesting BehaviorImmunityFeathervisual_artImmunologyAntibody Formationbiology.proteinvisual_art.visual_art_mediumCross-fosteringAnimalsFemalePasseriformesAntibodyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of evolutionary biology
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Breeding near heterospecifics as a defence against brood parasites: can redstarts lower probability of cuckoo parasitism using neighbours?

2022

Breeding habitat choice based on the attraction to other species can provide valuable social information and protection benefits. In birds, species with overlapping resources can be a cue of good quality habitats; species with shared predators and/or brood parasites can increase joint vigilance or cooperative mobbing, while raptors may provide a protective umbrella against these threats. We tested whether the migratory common redstart (Phoenicurus phoenicurus) is attracted to breed near active nests of the great tit (Parus major), a keystone-information source for migrant passerine birds, or a top predator, the northern goshawk (Accipiter gentilis). This system is unique to test these quest…

interspecific interactionpesintälisääntymiskäyttäytyminennest-site choiceheterospecific attractionfrontline defenceeläinten käyttäytyminenNesting Behaviorreproductive successPredatory BehaviorlinnutAnimalsParasitesPasseriformesEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsProbabilityOecologia
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Interspecific information on predation risk affects nest site choice in a passerine bird

2018

Abstract Background Breeding site choice constitutes an important part of the species niche. Nest predation affects breeding site choice, and has been suggested to drive niche segregation and local coexistence of species. Interspecific social information use may, in turn, result in copying or rejection of heterospecific niche characteristics and thus affect realized niche overlap between species. We tested experimentally whether a migratory bird, the pied flycatcher Ficedula hypoleuca, collects information about nest predation risk from indirect cues of predators visiting nests of heterospecific birds. Furthermore, we investigated whether the migratory birds can associate such information w…

species coexistenceEvolutionRealized nicheBreedingIntraspecific variationeläinten käyttäytyminenChoice BehaviorNesting BehaviorSongbirdsSpecies SpecificitySocial informationRisk Factorspredation riskQH359-425AnimalskirjosieppoNest site choicepesintäSpecies coexistencesaalistussocial informationvarpuslinnutintraspecific variationrealized nichePredatory Behaviornest site choiceFemaleCuesPredation riskResearch ArticleBMC Evolutionary Biology
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