Search results for "Songbird"

showing 10 items of 62 documents

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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Effects of forest patch size on physiological stress and immunocompetence in an area-sensitive passerine, the Eurasian treecreeper ( Certhia familiar…

2004

We manipulated the primary brood size of Eurasian treecreepers (Certhia familiaris) breeding in different sized forest patches (0.5-12.8 ha) in moderately fragmented landscapes. We examined the effects of brood size manipulation (reduced, control, enlarged) and forest patch size on physiological stress (heterophil-lymphocyte ratios; H/L), body condition and cell-mediated immunocompetence (phytohaemagglutinin test). Nestlings' H/L ratios were negatively related to forest patch area in control and enlarged broods, whereas no effects were found in reduced broods. The effects of forest patch area were strongest in enlarged broods, which had, in general, twofold higher H/L ratios than control an…

Population DynamicsZoologyEnvironmentPopulation densityGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyTreesSongbirdsStress Physiologicalbiology.animalLeukocytesAnimalsPhytohemagglutininsFinlandreproductive and urinary physiologyPhysiological stressGeneral Environmental SciencePopulation DensityGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologybiologyEcologyfungiGeneral MedicineCerthia familiarisbiology.organism_classificationPasserineBroodHabitat destructionLinear Modelsbehavior and behavior mechanismsTreecreeperImmunocompetenceGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesResearch ArticleProceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences
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Dissemination of wine-related yeasts by migratory birds.

2013

The present work was undertaken to evaluate the contribution of migratory birds in the environmental dissemination of yeasts. Four sites (Mazara del Vallo, Lampedusa, Ustica and Linosa), representing the main stop-over points in Sicily, were analysed during spring and autumnal bird migration and 349 birds (belonging to 10 families) were ringed and analysed for yeast presence. A total of 125 yeasts were isolated and identified by a multiple genotypic approach, consisting of restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) of 5.8S rRNA gene and 26S rRNA and sequencing of D1/D2 domain of the 26S rRNA gene, which resulted in the recognition of 18 species, including the technological relevant Sac…

SACCHAROMYCES-CEREVISIAEFERMENTATIONIDENTIFICATIONSTRAIN CHARACTERIZATIONSURVIVALSettore BIO/05 - ZoologiaSACCHAROMYCES-CEREVISIAE; STRAIN CHARACTERIZATION; REGION; IDENTIFICATION; FERMENTATION; POPULATION; SONGBIRDS; EVOLUTION; SURVIVAL; HABITATHABITATPOPULATIONSONGBIRDSEVOLUTIONREGIONSettore AGR/16 - Microbiologia Agraria
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THE EFFECT OF ALTERNATIVE PREY ON THE DYNAMICS OF IMPERFECT BATESIAN AND MÜLLERIAN MIMICRIES

2004

Both Batesian and Müllerian mimicries are considered classical evidence of natural selection where predation pressure has, at times, created a striking similarity between unrelated prey species. Batesian mimicry, in which palatable mimics resemble unpalatable aposematic species, is parasitic and only beneficial to the mimics. By contrast, in classical Müllerian mimicry the cost of predators' avoidance learning is shared between similar unpalatable co-mimics, and therefore mimicry benefits all parties. Recent studies using mathematical modeling have questioned the dynamics of Müllerian mimicry, suggesting that fitness benefits should be calculated in a way similar to Batesian mimicry; that i…

Sexual mimicryFood ChainPopulationObservationAposematismBiologyModels BiologicalMüllerian mimicryPredationSongbirdsAvoidance LearningGeneticsAggressive mimicryAnimalsSelection GeneticeducationFinlandEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicseducation.field_of_studyEcologyBatesian mimicryPhenotypeEvolutionary biologyPredatory BehaviorLinear ModelsMimicryGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesEvolution
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Deconstructing incubation behaviour in response to ambient temperature over different timescales

2021

Avian embryos need a stable thermal environment to develop optimally, while incubat-ing females need to allocate time to self-maintenance off the nest. In species with female-only incubation, eggs are exposed to ambient temperatures that usually cool them down during female absences. The lower the ambient temperature the sooner females should return to re-warm the eggs. When incubation constraints ease at increasing ambient temperatures, females respond by increasing either incubation effort or self-maintenance time. These responses are population-dependent even within the same species; but it is uncertain whether they are caused by local environmental conditions or they are an artefact fro…

SongbirdParus majorAnimal Science and ZoologyChristian ministryIncubation boutsBiologyNest attentivenessIncubationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsAgricultural economicsIncubation duration
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Heterospecific female mimicry in Ficedula flycatchers

2014

Mimicry is a widespread phenomenon. Vertebrate visual mimicry often operates in an intraspecific sexual context, with some males resembling conspecific females. Pied flycatcher (Ficedula hypoleuca) dorsal plumage varies from the ancestral black to female-like brown. Experimental studies have shown that conspecific and heterospecific (collared flycatcher, F. albicollis) individuals of both sexes respond, at least initially, to brown individuals as if they were female. We quantified the perceptual and biochemical differences between brown feathers and found that brown pied flycatcher males are indistinguishable from heterospecific, but not from conspecific, females in both aspects. To our kno…

SympatrySexual mimicryEcologyFicedulaZoologyContext (language use)Biologybiology.organism_classificationSongbirdsSympatric speciationPlumagecomic_booksMimicryAnimalsta1181FemaleFlycatcherEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicscomic_books.characterJournal of Evolutionary Biology
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The role of extrinsic and intrinsic factors on departure decisions of a long-distance migratory passerine

2013

[EN] Factors determining departure decisions of migrants from a stopover site can be extrinsic and/or intrinsic but the relative role of each of these factors on departure decisions is still poorly known. Date and wind should be the main factors determining departure decisions in a long-distance migrant, which is expected to minimise duration of migration. Date was considered as an intrinsic factor and wind as an extrinsic one. We analysed the capture-recapture data of a long-distance migrant European songbird, the sedge warbler Acrocephalus schoenobaenus,from a stopover site in northern Iberia during the autumn migration period to quantify the relative importance of several factors on emig…

Tailwind assistanceZOOLOGIAAsistencia con vientos de colaDensityModelos de Cormack-Jolly-SeberFechaSedge warblerbiology.animalAcrocephalusEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsbiologyPopulation sizeDateDecisión de partidabiology.organism_classificationPasserineCarricerín comúnSongbirdEmigrationDeparture decisionSedge warblerGeographyTailwindCormack-Jolly-Seber modelsAnimal Science and ZoologyDemographic economicsDensidad
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Predator proximity as a stressor in breeding flycatchers: mass loss, stress protein induction, and elevated provisioning.

2010

We investigated the physiological and behavioral consequences for prey breeding at different distances from a nesting predator. In a natural setting, Pied Flycatchers (Ficedula hypoleuca) made territory location decisions relative to established Sparrowhawk (Accipiter nisus) nests. From female flycatchers attending nests at different distances from Sparrowhawk nests, we measured body mass, blood stress protein (HSP60 and HSP70), and plasma immunoglobulin levels at the beginning (initial) and end (final) of the flycatcher breeding cycle, and provisioning rates during the nestling phase. We found that individuals breeding in closer proximity to Sparrowhawk nests, under higher perceived predat…

biologyBehavior AnimalRaptorsEcologyPhysiological conditionFicedulaInsectivoreAccipiterFeeding Behaviorbiology.organism_classificationSparrowhawkPredationSongbirdsNestStress PhysiologicalPredatory BehaviorWeight LossAccipitridaeAnimalsFemaleEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsDemographyEcology
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Predator mimicry, not conspicuousness, explains the efficacy of butterfly eyespots

2015

Large conspicuous eyespots on butterfly wings have been shown to deter predators. This has been traditionally explained by mimicry of vertebrate eyes, but recently the classic eye-mimicry hypothesis has been challenged. It is proposed that the conspicuousness of the eyespot, not mimicry, is what causes aversion due to sensory biases, neophobia or sensory overloads. We conducted an experiment to directly test whether the eye-mimicry or the conspicuousness hypothesis better explain eyespot efficacy. We used great tits ( Parus major ) as model predator, and tested their reaction towards animated images on a computer display. Birds were tested against images of butterflies without eyespots, wi…

conspicuousness hypothesispredator mimicryBiologyEyeGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyPredationbutterfly eyespotsSongbirdsmedicineAnimalsWings AnimalResearch ArticlesBiological MimicryGeneral Environmental ScienceParusCommunicationGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyPigmentationbusiness.industryBiological MimicryNeophobiaAnimal colorationGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseasegreat titsEvolutionary biologyButterflyVisual PerceptionMimicryta1181EyespotGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesbusinessButterfliesProceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
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Behavioural thresholds of blue tit colour vision and the effect of background chromatic complexity

2020

Vision is a vital attribute to foraging, navigation, mate selection and social signalling in animals, which often have a very different colour perception in comparison to humans. For understanding how animal colour perception works, vision models provide the smallest colour difference that animals of a given species are assumed to detect. To determine the just-noticeable-difference, or JND, vision models use Weber fractions that set discrimination thresholds of a stimulus compared to its background. However, although vision models are widely used, they rely on assumptions of Weber fractions since the exact fractions are unknown for most species. Here, we test; i) which Weber fractions in lo…

media_common.quotation_subjecthavaitsemineneläinten käyttäytyminen050105 experimental psychologydiscrimination thresholdslaw.inventionStimulus (psychology)Songbirdsvärit03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineCyanistes caeruleuslawContrast (vision)AnimalsHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesChromatic scaleSet (psychology)sinitiainenMathematicsHuemedia_commonreceptor-noisevision testingbiologyColor Visionbusiness.industryWeber fraction05 social sciencesCyanistesaistitPattern recognitionavian vision modelbiology.organism_classificationaistinreseptoritnäköSensory SystemsOphthalmologyMate choiceAchromatic lenspavoArtificial intelligencebusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgeryColor Perception
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