Interspecific information on predation risk affects nest site choice in a passerine bird
Tolvanen, J., Seppänen, J.-T., Mönkkönen, M., Thomson, R. L., Ylönen, H., & Forsman, J. T. (2018). Interspecific information on predation risk affects nest site choice in a passerine bird. BMC Evolutionary Biology, 18, Article 181. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12862-018-1301-3
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2018Copyright
© The Author(s), 2018.
Background: Breeding site choice constitutes an important part of the species niche. Nest predation affects
breeding site choice, and has been suggested to drive niche segregation and local coexistence of species. Interspecific
social information use may, in turn, result in copying or rejection of heterospecific niche characteristics and thus affect
realized niche overlap between species. We tested experimentally whether a migratory bird, the pied flycatcher
Ficedula hypoleuca, collects information about nest predation risk from indirect cues of predators visiting nests of
heterospecific birds. Furthermore, we investigated whether the migratory birds can associate such information with a
specific nest site characteristic and generalize the information to their own nest site choice.
Results: Our results demonstrate that flycatchers can use the fate of heterospecific nesting attempts in their own nest
site choice, but do so selectively. Young flycatcher females, when making the decision quickly, associated the fate of an
artificial nest with nest-site characteristics and avoided the characteristic associated with higher nest predation risk.
Conclusions: Copying nest site choices of successful heterospecifics, and avoiding choices which led to failed
attempts, may amplify or counter effects of nest predation on niche overlap, with important consequences for
between-species niche divergence-convergence dynamics, species coexistence and predator-prey interactions
...
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