4.5 Article

A critical analysis of 'false-feeding' behavior in a cooperatively breeding bird: disturbance effects, satiated nestlings or deception?

Journal

BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY AND SOCIOBIOLOGY
Volume 61, Issue 10, Pages 1623-1635

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00265-007-0394-2

Keywords

bell miner; white-winged chough; carrion crow; helping at the nest; signaling hypotheses

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'False feeding,' where helpers arrive at nests with food but fail to provision the young, has been reported in several cooperative species. This and other potentially 'deceptive' behavior has been interpreted as indicating that helping may operate as a signal within such social groups. We critically examine these phenomena in the provisioning behavior of the bell miner Manorina melanophrys. Excessively close observation distances can artificially elevate the rate of false feeding in this (and other) species, but once this had been accounted for, there was little evidence for any 'deceptive' behavior by helpers or breeders. Natural and experimentally induced variation in the presence of a potential conspecific audience at the nest did not have any consistent influence upon the rate of false feeds, which was low at 7.94% of 6,880 nest visits. Instead, encountering unexpectedly low levels of brood demand provided a more parsimonious explanation for those visits where helpers failed to feed nestlings or ate the food themselves. Failure to completely transfer a load to nestlings was more likely when

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