Search results for "Periparus ater"

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“The tale of the three little tits”: Different nest building solutions under the same environmental pressures

2020

Evolutionary selection pressures, and species-specific ecology and behavior, promote a great variability in the size and composition of nests. However, it would be expected that phylogenetically close species, with similar ecological needs, breeding at the same time in the same place, would also build similar nests. In contrast with this, previous studies have found differences in nest mass and composition among closely related sympatric species. These differences have been attributed to small differences in body size (smaller species building larger and/or more insulated nests), or to the different ways in which species perceive the environment (e.g. perceived predation risk). In this stud…

ThermoregulationEcologyEcology (disciplines)Tructuring materialsBiologyPeriparus aterCyanistes caeruleusMixed forestNest insulationNestParus majorAnimal Science and ZoologyNest sizeEvolutionary selectionEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsAvian Biology Research
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Data from: Gene flow in the European coal tit, Periparus ater (Aves: Passeriformes): low among Mediterranean populations but high in a continental co…

2018

Extant phylogeographic patterns of Palearctic terrestrial vertebrates are generally believed to have originated from glacial range fragmentation. Post-Pleistocene range expansions have led to the formation of secondary contact zones among genetically distinct taxa. For coal tits (Periparus ater), such a contact zone has been localized in Germany. In this study, we quantified gene flow between Fennoscandian and southern European coal tits using a set of 13 microsatellite loci. STRUCTURE analysis revealed four genetic clusters two of these on Mediterranean islands. German populations were genetically admixed but introgression of southern alleles was evident for Fennoscandian populations. In t…

medicine and health carePleistocene to Holoceneisland populationsParidaeMedicinesubspeciesglacial refugiaLife sciencesPeriparus ater
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