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Ecology ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph B. Burant ◽  
Eric W. Heisey ◽  
Nathaniel T. Wheelwright ◽  
Amy E. M. Newman ◽  
Shannon Whelan ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luca G. Hahn ◽  
Rebecca Hooper ◽  
Guillam E. McIvor ◽  
Alex Thornton

Animals create diverse structures, both individually and cooperatively, using materials from their environment. One striking example are the nests birds build for reproduction, which protect the offspring from external stressors such as predators and temperature, promoting reproductive success. To construct a nest successfully, birds need to make various decisions, for example regarding the nest material and their time budgets. To date, research has focused mainly on species where one sex is primarily responsible for building the nest. In contrast, the cooperative strategies of monogamous species in which both sexes contribute to nest building are poorly understood. Here we investigated the role of both sexes in nest building and fitness correlates of behaviour in wild, monogamous jackdaw pairs (Corvus monedula). We show that both partners contributed to nest building and behaved similarly, with females and males present in the nest box for a comparable duration and transporting material to the nest equally often. However, while females spent more time constructing the nest, males tended to invest more time in vigilance, potentially as a means of coping with competition for nest cavities. These findings suggest a moderate degree of division of labour, which may facilitate cooperation. Moreover, some aspects of behaviour were related to proxies of reproductive success (lay date and egg volume). Females that contributed relatively more to bringing material laid earlier clutches and pairs that spent less time together in the nest box had larger eggs. Thus, selection pressures may act on how nest building pairs spend their time and cooperatively divide the labour. We conclude that cooperative nest building in birds could be associated with monogamy and obligate biparental care, and provides a vital but relatively untapped context through which to study the evolution of cooperation.


Ecology ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 101 (9) ◽  
Author(s):  
David W. Winkler ◽  
Kelly K. Hallinger ◽  
Teresa M. Pegan ◽  
Conor C. Taff ◽  
Mo A. Verhoeven ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Robert J. Burnside ◽  
João L. Guilherme ◽  
Nigel J. Collar ◽  
Paul M. Dolman

AbstractBackpack-mounted satellite transmitters (PTTs) are used extensively in the study of avian habitat use and of the movements and demography of medium- to large-bodied species, but can affect individuals’ performance and fitness. Transparent assessment of potential transmitter effects is important for both ethical accountability and confidence in, or adjustment to, life history parameter estimates. We assessed the influence of transmitters on seven reproductive parameters in Asian houbara Chlamydotis macqueenii, comparing 114 nests of 38 females carrying PTTs to 184 nests of untagged birds (non-PTT) over seven breeding seasons (2012–2018) in Uzbekistan. There was no evidence of any influence of PTTs on: lay date (non-PTT x̅ = 91.7 Julian day ± 12.3 SD; PTT x̅ = 95.1 Julian day ± 15.7 SD); clutch size (non-PTT x̅= 3.30 ± 0.68 SD; PTT x̅ = 3.25 ± 0.65 SD); mean egg weight at laying (non-PTT x̅ = 66.1 g ± 5.4 SD; PTT x̅ = 66.4 g ± 5.4 SD); nest success (non-PTT x̅ = 57.08% ± 4.3 SE; PTT x̅ = 58.24% ± 4.5 SE for nests started 2 April); egg hatchability (non-PTT x̅ = 88.3% ± 2.2 SE; PTT x̅ = 88.3% ± 2.6 SE); or chick survival to fledging from broods that had at least one surviving chick (non-PTT x̅ = 63.4% ± 4.2 SE; PTT x̅ = 64.4% ± 4.7 SE). High nesting propensity (97.3% year−1 ± 1.9% SE) of tagged birds indicated minimal PTT effect on breeding probability. These findings show that harness-mounted transmitters can give unbiased measures of demographic parameters of this species, and are relevant to other large-bodied, cursorial, ground-nesting birds of open habitats, particularly other bustards.


2019 ◽  
Vol 286 (1908) ◽  
pp. 20190952 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jack D. Shutt ◽  
Irene Benedicto Cabello ◽  
Katharine Keogan ◽  
David I. Leech ◽  
Jelmer M. Samplonius ◽  
...  

Establishing the cues or constraints that influence avian timing of breeding is the key to accurate prediction of future phenology. This study aims to identify the aspects of the environment that predict the timing of two measures of breeding phenology (nest initiation and egg laying date) in an insectivorous woodland passerine, the blue tit ( Cyanistes caeruleus ). We analyse data collected from a 220 km, 40-site transect over 3 years and consider spring temperatures, tree leafing phenology, invertebrate availability and photoperiod as predictors of breeding phenology. We find that mean night-time temperature in early spring is the strongest predictor of both nest initiation and lay date and suggest this finding is most consistent with temperature acting as a constraint on breeding activity. Birch budburst phenology significantly predicts lay date additionally to temperature, either as a direct cue or indirectly via a correlated variable. We use cross-validation to show that our model accurately predicts lay date in two further years and find that similar variables predict lay date well across the UK national nest record scheme. This work refines our understanding of the principal factors influencing the timing of tit reproductive phenology and suggests that temperature may have both a direct and indirect effect.


2018 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 482-497 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pierre Villemereuil ◽  
Alexis Rutschmann ◽  
John G. Ewen ◽  
Anna W. Santure ◽  
Patricia Brekke

2016 ◽  
Vol 22 (10) ◽  
pp. 3259-3272 ◽  
Author(s):  
Albert B. Phillimore ◽  
David I. Leech ◽  
James W. Pearce-Higgins ◽  
Jarrod D. Hadfield
Keyword(s):  

2015 ◽  
Vol 370 (1667) ◽  
pp. 20140128 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maaike de Jong ◽  
Jenny Q. Ouyang ◽  
Arnaud Da Silva ◽  
Roy H. A. van Grunsven ◽  
Bart Kempenaers ◽  
...  

The effects of artificial night lighting on animal behaviour and fitness are largely unknown. Most studies report short-term consequences in locations that are also exposed to other anthropogenic disturbance. We know little about how the effects of nocturnal illumination vary with different light colour compositions. This is increasingly relevant as the use of LED lights becomes more common, and LED light colour composition can be easily adjusted. We experimentally illuminated previously dark natural habitat with white, green and red light, and measured the effects on life-history decisions and fitness in two free-living songbird species, the great tit ( Parus major ) and pied flycatcher ( Ficedula hypoleuca ) in two consecutive years. In 2013, but not in 2014, we found an effect of light treatment on lay date, and of the interaction of treatment and distance to the nearest lamp post on chick mass in great tits but not in pied flycatchers. We did not find an effect in either species of light treatment on breeding densities, clutch size, probability of brood failure, number of fledglings and adult survival. The finding that light colour may have differential effects opens up the possibility to mitigate negative ecological effects of nocturnal illumination by using different light spectra.


Ecography ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 37 (7) ◽  
pp. 670-678 ◽  
Author(s):  
David W. Winkler ◽  
Kevin M. Ringelman ◽  
Peter O. Dunn ◽  
Linda Whittingham ◽  
David J. T. Hussell ◽  
...  

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