4.1 Article

Do non-direct heterospecific cues of avian predator activity alter reproductive modes of a passerine bird?

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EUROPEAN ZOOLOGICAL JOURNAL
卷 90, 期 1, 页码 211-223

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TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/24750263.2023.2181988

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Egg characteristics; fear effect; maternal investment; Parus major; risk assessment

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This study shows that in birds, perceived predation risk influences reproductive decisions, such as reducing parental investment in offspring. It is the first experiment to demonstrate that the presence of feathers, simulating avian prey remains, can induce changes in the reproductive decisions of adult birds. Specifically, female great tits increase their maternal investment in eggs after being exposed to feathers and woodchips.
Predators affect prey by killing them or inducing changes in their physiology and behaviour through a fear effect associated with predation risk. In birds, perceived predation risk influences reproductive decisions, such as the reduction of parental investment in offspring during both egg production and nestling rearing. Visual and vocal cues of predator presence have been widely used to test the direct effects of predation risk. However, few studies have examined the indirect cues of predator activity such as dead avian prey or their remains. In this study, for the first time, we experimentally studied whether piles of feathers, simulating the remains of avian prey, induce changes in the reproductive decisions of adult birds. Before and during egg laying, great tit, Parus major, pairs were exposed to piles of bright down and cover feathers from domestic goose (treatment), woodchips (procedural control), or were not exposed (control). Our experiment affected maternal investment in individual eggs, but did not influence other reproductive parameters. Females from the treatment group laid larger and more asymmetrical (pointed) eggs than control females. Moreover, females from the procedural control group laid larger eggs than those from the control group, but without differences in egg shape. However, the eggs from the treatment and procedural control groups did not differ. This indicates that great tit females can perceive feathers and woodchips as informative cues, such as potential predation risk or habitat suitability, or as novel items in the environment. Importantly, females respond to such cues by changing their maternal investment in eggs, which may result from an adaptive mechanism aimed at increasing offspring fitness in the face of specific environmental conditions experienced by a female. Our study contributes to the understanding of how female songbirds adjust their maternal reproductive investment in response to publicly available social and environmental cues.

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