The past and the present in decision-making : the use of conspecific and heterospecific cues in nest site selection
Kivelä, S. M., Seppänen, J.-T., Ovaskainen, O., Doligez, B., Gustafsson, L., Mönkkönen, M., & Forsman, J. T. (2014). The past and the present in decision-making : the use of conspecific and heterospecific cues in nest site selection. Ecology, 95(12), 3428-3439. https://doi.org/10.1890/13-2103.1
Published in
EcologyAuthors
Date
2014Copyright
© 2014 by the Ecological Society of America.
Nest site selection significantly affects fitness, so adaptations for assessment of
the qualities of available sites are expected. The assessment may be based on personal or socialinformation, the latter referring to the observed location and performance of both conspecific and heterospecific individuals. Contrary to large-scale breeding habitat selection, small-scale nest site selection within habitat patches is insufficiently understood. We analyzed nest site selection in the migratory Collared Flycatcher Ficedula albicollis in relation to present and past cues provided by conspecifics and by resident tits within habitat patches by using long-termdata. Collared Flycatchers preferred nest boxes that were occupied by conspecifics in the previous year. This preference was strongest in breeding pairs where both individuals bred in the same forest patch in the previous year. The results also suggest preference for nest boxes close to boxes where conspecifics had a high breeding success in the previous year, and for nest
boxes which are presently surrounded by a high number of breeding Great Tits Parus major.
The results indicate social information use in nest site selection at a small spatial scale, where Collared Flycatchers use conspecific cues with a time lag of one year and heterospecific cues instantly.
...
Publisher
Ecological Society of AmericaISSN Search the Publication Forum
0012-9658Keywords
Publication in research information system
https://converis.jyu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/24449294
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
Related items
Showing items with similar title or keywords.
-
Social learning within and across predator species reduces attacks on novel aposematic prey
Hämäläinen, Liisa; Mappes, Johanna; Rowland, Hannah M.; Teichmann, Marianne; Thorogood, Rose (Wiley-Blackwell, 2020)1. To make adaptive foraging decisions, predators need to gather information about the profitability of prey. As well as learning from prey encounters, recent studies show that predators can learn about prey defences by ... -
Selecting the best model in regression analysis : application to the CALEX data
Kemikangas, Miia (2002) -
Subsample Selection Methods in the Lake Management
Koski, Vilja; Kärkkäinen, Salme; Karvanen, Juha (Springer, 2024)The problem of subsample selection among an enormous number of combinations arises when some covariates are available for all units, but the response can be measured only for a subset of them. When estimating a Bayesian ... -
Ecological and evolutionary consequences of selective interspecific information use
Hämäläinen, Reetta; Kajanus, Mira, H.; Forsman, Jukka, T.; Kivelä, Sami, M.; Seppänen, Janne‐Tuomas; Loukola, Olli, J. (Wiley, 2023)Recent work has shown that animals frequently use social information from individuals of their own species as well as from other species; however, the ecological and evolutionary consequences of this social information use ... -
Conspecific attraction boosts local density while causing lags in range expansion despite high dispersal ability: experiments with a reintroduced endangered mammal
Morgan, William; Cornulier, Thomas; Lambin, Xavier (Open Science Centre, University of Jyväskylä, 2018)The potential range of many species is shifting, reflecting changing ecological conditions due to climate change or the disappearance of causes of decline. The length of any lag between new habitat becoming available and ...