4.2 Article

Nest site selection and nesting success of five species of passerines in a South American open Prosopis woodland

Journal

JOURNAL OF ORNITHOLOGY
Volume 145, Issue 1, Pages 16-22

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10336-003-0002-9

Keywords

Argentina; arid areas; habitat selection; Monte Desert; nest predation

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I analyzed nest site preferences and whether these preferences were linked to nest success of five bird species breeding in an and area of southern South America. Most nests (90%) were located in three plant species (Geoffroea decorticans, Capparis atamisquea, and Atriplex lampa). Serpophaga griseiceps, Poospiza ornata, and P. torquata nested in plants with size significantly different from randomly selected plants. At the mesohabitat scale (i.e., habitat patch surrounding the nest), four species showed clear differences from random patches within the general habitat, and the remaining species (Saltatricula multicolor) showed a non-significant trend. The daily survival rate of S. griseiceps nests placed in the preferred plant species (i.e., G. decorticans) was lower than those in the other nest-plants. In the other four bird species, nest survival did not differ between preferred and other plants used for nesting. At the scale of microhabitat (i.e., plant size and location of the nest inside the plant), no significant differences were detected between unsuccessful and successful nests. Similarly, unsuccessful nest patches did not differ significantly in habitat features from those that were successful. High nest predation rates found in this habitat (around 85% for the total assemblage) and a relatively high diversity of predators (and of predation tactics) appear to impede the presence of safe sites for nesting (i.e., there are trade-offs between avoidance strategies).

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