Search results for "bird nests"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

Ptiliolum marginatum (Aube, 1850) (Coleoptera: Ptiliidae)– gatunek nowy dla Polski z Białowieskiego Parku Narodowego

2021

We present the first record of Ptiliolum marginatum for Poland. The specimens have been extracted from two nests of the wood warbler Phylloscopus sibilatrix in 2020, during investigations of the invertebrate fauna inhabiting bird nests. The samples were collected in the strictly protected part of the Białowieża National Park, in eastern Poland. We provide general information on the geographical distribution of Ptiliolum marginatum in Europe, the state of knowledge of the genus Ptiliolum in Poland, and further documentation including colour photographs of dorsal and ventral habitus, and characteristic features of hind femora and spermatheca of females.

Coleopteraprimeval Białowieża Forest.bird nestsnest-dwelling arthropodsentomofaunafeatherbeetlesActa Entomologica Silesiana
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Redescription of Chiropturopoda nidiphila Wiśniewski & Hirschmann (Acari: Uropodina) from a woodpecker’s tree holes, including all development stages…

2021

All development stages of Chiropturopoda nidiphila Wiśniewski & Hirschmann, 1983 are described, which has previously been known only from the deutonymph stage. The species is closely associated with tree holes excavated by woodpeckers. Chiropturopoda nidiphila was redescribed and the genus diagnosis was completed. The description of the species morphology is based largely on scanning (SEM) electronograms. Diagnoses differentiating all of the known species of the genus Chiropturopoda are provided, including their developmental stages.

mitesEcologybiologyEcologyChiropturopodaEcology (disciplines)bird nestsbat guanoMorphology (biology)hole inhabitantsWoodpeckerbiology.organism_classificationBird nestgenus diagnosisGenusInsect ScienceAcariTree (set theory)Ecology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSystematic and Applied Acarology
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Decomposition of nest material in tree holes and nest-boxes occupied by European Starlings Sturnus vulgaris: an experimental study

2017

Numerous bird species depend on the availability of tree cavities, and most non-excavators fill their cavities with considerable amounts of nest material. If not removed, this material can accumulate and render cavities unusable, as recorded in some nest-box studies. Data from earlier studies of tree cavities, however, showed that nest material can decrease mostly due to in situ decomposition, but the relative difference between nest decomposition in tree holes and nest-boxes is still unknown. We undertook parallel studies of decay in tree holes and nest-boxes used by European Starlings Sturnus vulgaris in oak-hornbeam stands (SW Poland). We inserted into its tree holes and nest-boxes litte…

0106 biological sciencesbiologyEcologylitter-bagsmedia_common.quotation_subjectbird nestsMicroclimateZoologybiology.organism_classificationBird nest010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesDecompositionCompetition (biology)010605 ornithologyTree (data structure)NestSturnusnest site choiceAnimal Science and Zoologynest material decompositioncavity nesting birdsnest-site cleaningmedia_commonActa Ornithologica
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