4.5 Article

Predator-induced reductions in nest visitation rates are modified by forest cover and food availability

期刊

BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY
卷 19, 期 5, 页码 1056-1062

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/beheco/arn063

关键词

life history; nest activity; nest predation; parental care; phenotypic plasticity; provisioning strategy

资金

  1. Kungliga Vetenskapsakademin
  2. Verner von Heidenstams fond [KVA-1373502]
  3. Stiftelsen for Zoologisk Forskning
  4. The Swedish Research Council, FORMAS [2003-0719]
  5. Konung Carl XVI Gustaf 50-ars jubileumsfond

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Bird parents can alert predators to the location of their nest. One mitigating option is that parents reduce their nest visitation rate in exchange for a lower predation risk. Here, using field data and experiments, we show that Siberian jay Perisoreus infaustus parents adjust feeding visit rates depending on an interaction of 3 factors: predator activity, nest concealment, and food availability. The rate of nest visits increased with the degree of nest concealment; yet, this relationship was modified by the presence of corvid predators. As the vegetation became more dense, parents at sites with high corvid activity disproportionately increased their feeding visit rates when compared with birds at sites with low corvid activity. We experimentally assessed how nesting cover affects this response of parents to the presence of corvids by using an Eurasian jay Garrulus glandarius model. Parents nesting at open sites ceased nest visits, whereas those nesting in dense forest continued feeding, albeit at a lower rate. Cover may thus not fully compensate for the effect of predator activity on feeding visit rates. However, offspring exposed to high predator activity might still receive the same amount of food because parents may adjust load sizes to compensate. This idea was confirmed by an experiment showing that in areas of high predator activity, food-supplemented birds significantly decreased nest visits when compared with nonsupplemented birds. These results indicate that some bird species can employ multiple nest-defense strategies to reduce predator-attracting nest visits; yet, these strategies may carry fitness consequences through reduced offspring quality.

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