Search results for "Poecile"

showing 10 items of 11 documents

Improved sampling at the subspecies level solves a taxonomic dilemma – A case study of two enigmatic Chinese tit species (Aves, Passeriformes, Parida…

2017

Abstract A recent full species-level phylogeny of tits, titmice and chickadees (Paridae) has placed the Chinese endemic black-bibbed tit (Poecile hypermelaenus) as the sister to the Palearctic willow tit (P. montanus). Because this sister-group relationship is in striking disagreement with the traditional affiliation of P. hypermelaenus close to the marsh tit (P. palustris) we tested this phylogenetic hypothesis in a multi-locus analysis with an extended taxon sampling including sixteen subspecies of willow tits and marsh tits. As a taxonomic reference we included type specimens in our analysis. The molecular genetic study was complemented with an analysis of biometric data obtained from mu…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineSystematicsChinaZoologySubspeciesDNA Mitochondrial010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciences03 medical and health sciencesSpecies SpecificityWillow titGeneticsAnimalsDNA Barcoding TaxonomicPasseriformesMolecular BiologyPhylogenyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsbiologyPhylogenetic treebiology.organism_classificationPoecile hypermelaenusPhylogeography030104 developmental biologyTaxonGenetic LociPoecileTaxonomy (biology)Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
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Līderisms putnu daudzsugu grupās un tā noteikšanas metodes

2018

Šī darba mērķis bija ziemojošo zīlīšu daudzsugu grupās noteikt līdersugu - sugu, uz kuras radīto akustisko informāciju (mobinga saucieniem) visvairāk reaģēs pārējie sociālās grupas dalībnieki. Tika izmantota akustiskā mobinga sauciena ierakstīšanas metode. Pētījumā aprakstīta ziemojošo daudzsugu putnu grupas dalībnieku reakcija uz pelēkās zīlītes Poecile montanus un cekulzīlītes Lophophanes cristatus mobinga saucieniem. Barotavās konstatēja četras sugas, kuras aktīvi reaģēja uz mobinga saucienu ierakstiem – pelēkās zīlītes, cekulzīlītes, meža zīlītes un dzilnīši. Visaktīvākā reakcija tika novērota uz pelēkās zīlītes mobinga saucieniem. Secināts, ka pelēkā zīlīte ir līdersuga ziemojošo zīlīš…

putnu daudzsugu grupaslīdersugaPoecile montanusmobinga uzvedībaBioloģijaLophophanes cristatus
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Disappearance rates of old nest material from tree cavities : an experimental study

2013

Numerous forest organisms critically depend on availability of tree cavities. Some birds and rodents fill their cavities with bulky nests, which – if not removed – could accumulate and render cavities unusable, as recorded in nest-box studies. Data from earlier studies indicate that old nests can disappear from tree cavities so fast that practically no remnants are detectable the following spring. Rapid decomposition of nests in situ, augmented by physical removal of nest material by the cavity-users have been proposed as possible causative mechanisms. We tested these hypotheses in cavities used by tits (Parus major L., Poecile palustris L.) in the Białowieża National Park (E Poland). To mi…

Parusnest materialGreat titMarsh titZoologyForestrycavityBiologybiology.organism_classificationPoecile palustrisdecayNestBotanyBiałowieża primaeval forestScandinavian Journal of Forest Research
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Age-dependent responses to alarm calls depend on foraging activity in Willow TitsPoecile montanus

2011

Survivorship in animals depends on both foraging activities and avoidance of predation, and thus behavioural decisions often reflect a trade-off between predation risk and foraging efficiency. In this experimental study, we compared behavioural responses of free-living adult and juvenile Willow Tits Poecile montanus to a conspecific alarm call in two treatments. The alarm call was played back when a focal bird was either not feeding, or feeding on a sunflower seed on the middle part of a spruce branch. When feeding at the time of the alarm call, juveniles more often stayed motionless or moved shorter distances than adults. Our results suggest that in hierarchical groups, juveniles are force…

ParusALARMbiologyEcologyPoecileForagingJuvenileAnimal Science and ZoologySunflower seedbiology.organism_classificationAlarm signalEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPredationIbis
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Morphology, geographical variation and the subspecies of Marsh TitPoecile palustrisin Britain and central Europe

2016

Capsule: All British Marsh Tits belong to subspecies Poecile palustris dresseri, being smaller than nominate P. p. palustris of central Europe. Aims: Determining the subspecies of Marsh Tit in Britain to test whether ssp. P. p. palustris occurs in northern England and Scotland, by assessing regional variation in size compared with central European birds. Methods: 1147 wing length and 250 tail length measurements from 953 Marsh Tits were compared between eight British locations to test for regional variation. Biometrics were compared between birds from Britain and six locations within the continental European range of ssp. palustris. Results: There was no regional variation in wing or tail l…

0106 biological sciencesMarshRange (biology)biometrySubspeciesAge and sex010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesPoecile palustris010605 ornithologytailsex determination analysisPoecile palustrisEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape Conservationgeographygeography.geographical_feature_categorybiologyEcologygeographical variationbiology.organism_classificationVariation (linguistics)EnglandScotlandRegional variationbirdsCentral European regionZoologyBird Study
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Phylogeny of long-tailed tits and allies inferred from mitochondrial and nuclear markers (Aves: Passeriformes, Aegithalidae)

2010

Abstract In this paper we provide a molecular phylogeny based on three mitochondrial and three nuclear markers for all long-tailed tit species of the genus Aegithalos including several doubtful subspecies (17 taxa) plus three close allies of SE Asian Leptopoecile and North American Psaltriparus . Genus Aegithalos is divided into three major clades, two of them showing only minor differentiation. Separation of two mitchondrial haploytpe clusters in the N Palearctic Long-tailed Tit, Ae. caudatus , was dated back to the Late Pleistocene, however, descendants from both lineages underwent a rapid post-Pleistocene range expansion and largely mixed over the entire distribution area. The Chinese po…

ChinaRange (biology)ZoologyBiologySubspeciesDNA MitochondrialEvolution MolecularGeneticsAnimalsPasseriformesCladeMolecular BiologyPhylogenyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsCell NucleusGeographyModels GeneticLeptopoecileAegithalidaeEcologySequence Analysis DNAAegithalosbiology.organism_classificationTaxonHaplotypesNorth AmericaMolecular phylogeneticsMolecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
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Microevolution of eastern palaearctic Grey tits as indicated by their vocalizations (Parus [Poecile]: Paridae, Aves) I. Parus montanus: Contributions…

2009

Within the Palaearctic Region, the Willow tit (Parus montanus) displays four vicariant forms of territorial song. 1. “Alpine” form (pure single-frequency whistles, Fig. 5: 1) in the Alps and adjacent mountains to the East. 2. “Lowland” or “Normal” form (frequency change from high to low within one note, Fig. 5: 2) in the other parts of NW, Central and SE Europe. 3. In populations of N and E Europe as well as of W and E Siberia every individual bird uses - so far as known - both song types; this “Siberian” form (Figs. 1, 2) includes intergrades (Fig. 3). The comparatively type-rich Siberian repertoire is found in a vast area from N and E Europe to the Amur River and Ussuriland in Siberia. 4.…

ParusbiologyEcologyAllopatric speciationSubspeciesbiology.organism_classificationHolarcticWillow titPoecileNearctic ecozoneGeneticsAnimal Science and ZoologyMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsParus atricapillusJournal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research
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Egalitarian mixed-species bird groups enhance winter survival of subordinate group members but only in high-quality forests

2020

AbstractOnly dominant individuals have unrestricted access to contested resources in group-living animals. In birds, subordinates with restricted access to resources may respond to intragroup contests by acquiring extra body reserves to avoid periods of food shortage. In turn, higher body mass reduces agility and increases predation and mortality risk to subordinates. Birds often live in hierarchically organized mixed-species groups, in which heterospecific individuals are considered to substitute for conspecifics as protection against predators at a significantly reduced competition cost. Crested tits (Lophophanes cristatus) and willow tits (Poecile montanus) form mixed-species groups duri…

0106 biological sciencesMaleWillowBehavioural ecologyZoologylcsh:Medicine010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesArticlePredationSongbirdsWillow titmedicineDominance (ecology)Animalslcsh:ScienceForaging sites ; mixed-species groups ; social complexity ; predation riskSocial evolutionMultidisciplinarybiologyAggressionlcsh:RInterspecific competitionbiology.organism_classificationAdaptation Physiological010601 ecologyDominance hierarchySocial DominancePoecilelcsh:QFemaleSeasonsmedicine.symptom
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Cohabitation of tree holes by ants and breeding birds in a temperate deciduous forest

2015

A previously unknown association of ants with birds breeding in tree holes is described. Ants Lasius brunneus Latreille (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) were found in c. 15% of nests of Parus major L. and Poecile palustris L. (Paridae) breeding in tree holes in the primeval deciduous forest located in the Białowieża National Park (Poland). The ants preferably used holes located higher above the ground. As such holes are warmer than the unused holes or other nest sites, it is suggested that the ants cohabit holes utilized by the tits to gain thermal benefits.

0106 biological sciencesParusbiologyNational parkved/biologyEcologyLasius brunneus05 social sciencesved/biology.organism_classification_rank.speciesForestryHymenopterabiology.organism_classificationTemperate deciduous forest010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesPoecile palustrisLasius brunneusDeciduousmicroclimate of tree holesNestParus major0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPoecile palustrisBiałowieża National Park050102 behavioral science & comparative psychologyScandinavian Journal of Forest Research
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Effect of Willow TitPoecile montanusalarm calls on attack rates by Pygmy OwlsGlaucidium passerinum

2013

One suggested anti-predator function of alarm calls is to deliver a message to a predator that it has been detected. Moreover, giving the alarm call could provide a signal to the predator that capturing the individual giving the alarm is more difficult than capturing its silent group members, as the caller is probably the most aware of the predator's location. In an aviary experiment using stuffed dummy Willow Tits Poecile montanus, we assessed whether an authentic alarm call given by Willow Tit affected Pygmy Owl Glaucidium passerinum prey preference. In the experiment, the Owls attacked only the ‘silent’ dummy individuals, suggesting that alarm calling could offer direct fitness benefits …

biologyEcologyZoologybiology.organism_classificationAlarm signalPredationALARMPygmy owlWillow titPoecileta1181Animal Science and ZoologyAnimal communicationGlaucidium passerinumEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsIbis
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