Good vibrations: remote‐tactile foraging success of wading birds is positively affected by the water content of substrates they forage in
Wiley Online Library » Journal of Avian Biology
by Carla J. du Toit, Anusuya Chinsamy, Susan J. Cunningham
1w ago
Some taxa of wading birds can locate buried prey by detecting vibratory cues in their foraging substrates while probe-foraging, using a sensory modality called ‘remote-touch'. As more saturated substrates transmit vibrations better, we predict that these birds can detect prey in wetter substrates more easily. We used sensory assays to test whether substrate water content affects the remote-touch foraging success rate of Hadeda ibises, Bostrychia hagedash. The birds were more successful at locating prey using vibratory cues than when relying on random direct contact with the beak alone. Their r ..read more
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Vocal dimorphism in Anna's hummingbirds
Wiley Online Library » Journal of Avian Biology
by Sierra Ru‐Yi Glassman, Adi Domer, Robert Dudley
1w ago
Sexual dimorphism in vocal signals is found across many bird species. By evaluating correlations among sex, behaviors, and vocalizations, the meaning and utility of sound production may be inferred. Anna's hummingbirds Calypte anna exhibit pronounced sexual dimorphism, with males being larger and having more vibrant coloration than females, but vocal dimorphism in the species is less studied. A common vocalization of Anna's hummingbirds is the chip note, which is produced by both sexes in a wide array of contexts. Here, we correlated temporal parameters of recorded chip notes with individual s ..read more
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Strangers like me: birds respond equally to a familiar and an unfamiliar sentinel species' alarm calls, but respond less to non‐core and non‐sentinel's alarm calls
Wiley Online Library » Journal of Avian Biology
by Jonah S. Dominguez, Morgan Bolger, Autumn Bush, Mark E. Hauber
1w ago
Alarm signals have evolved to communicate imminent threats to conspecifics but animals may also perceive other species' alarm displays to obtain adaptive information. In birds, mixed-species foraging flocks are often structured around a focal sentinel species, which produces reliable alarm calls that inform eavesdropping non-sentinel heterospecifics about predation risk. Ongoing work has revealed that several species can recognize the alarm calls of certain sentinel species even without prior encounters, including when these are from distant biogeographic regions. Similar work has yet to exami ..read more
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Young male blackcaps with blood parasite coinfections cope with oxidative stress favouring anthocyanin‐rich food during migratory fattening
Wiley Online Library » Journal of Avian Biology
by Lucía Jiménez‐Gallardo, Jimena López‐Arrabé, Javier Pérez‐Tris, Carolina Remacha
2w ago
Parasites may alter host physiology, which may promote behavioural adaptations to counteract their effect. Adaptive feeding may help individuals to cope with infection, especially during physiologically demanding life stages. For instance, migrating birds need fuel for long-distance flights and repair oxidative damage caused by intense aerobic exercise, and parasites may influence on how individuals balance these needs. Infected birds may face increased oxidative challenges, which could induce them to favour antioxidant defences over other needs, such as fattening. We tested whether migrating ..read more
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Using juvenile movements as a proxy for adult habitat and space use in long‐lived territorial species: a case study on the golden eagle
Wiley Online Library » Journal of Avian Biology
by Arzhela Hemery, Olivier Duriez, Christian Itty, Pierre‐Yves Henry, Aurélien Besnard
2w ago
Effective conservation management of wildlife species depends on understanding their space and habitat use. Telemetry has become the primary source of data for information on how species use space and habitats. However, animals can be difficult to capture, leading to limited sample sizes and thus low quality inferences. As some individuals may be easier to capture than others, it may be tempting to use them to make inferences about the studied population as a whole. Juvenile birds, in contrast to adults, are easy to capture while they are still in the nest. However, there are few studies on wh ..read more
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The northern wheatear is reducing its distribution in its southernmost European range and moving to higher altitudes
Wiley Online Library » Journal of Avian Biology
by Sandro López‐Ramírez, Raimundo Real, Antonio‐Román Muñoz
1M ago
Under the current pattern of climate change, mountain bird populations are generally shifting their ranges to higher elevations, tracking their climatic optima. Nevertheless, space limitations at high altitudes constrain mountain species' resilience to climatic change, making them particularly vulnerable. In extreme cases, the climatic niche of some species can move beyond mountaintops, ultimately driving such species to extinction. This study presents the case of the northern wheatear Oenanthe oenanthe in mainland Spain and compares its breeding distribution from 2003 to 2022. Spain, where th ..read more
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Recurrence, fidelity and proximity to previously visited sites throughout the annual cycle in a trans‐Saharan migrant, the common cuckoo
Wiley Online Library » Journal of Avian Biology
by Carlotta Bonaldi, Yannis Vardanis, Mikkel Willemoes, Chris M. Hewson, Philip W. Atkinson, Jan‐Åke Nilsson, Raymond H. G. Klaassen, Roine Strandberg, Anders P. Tøttrup, Paul W. Howey, Thomas Alerstam, Kasper Thorup
1M ago
Most migratory birds return every year to the same breeding sites and some species show a similarly high fidelity to wintering grounds as well. Fidelity to stopover sites during migration has been much less studied and is usually found to be lower. Here, we investigate site fidelity and distance to previously visited sites throughout the annual cycle in the common cuckoo, a nocturnal trans-Saharan migrant, based on satellite-tracking data from repeated annual migrations of thirteen adult males. All birds (100%) returned to the same breeding grounds, with a median shortest distance of only 1 km ..read more
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