面对危险时的呼唤:雏鸟红翼黑鸟(Agelaius phoeniceus)会在捕食者回放时抑制乞讨吗?

The Auk Pub Date : 2019-12-17 DOI:10.1093/auk/ukz071
K. Yasukawa, Jessica Sollenberger, Josie Lindsey-Robbins, E. DeBruyn
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引用次数: 4

摘要

对红翅黑鸟(Agelaius phoeniceus)等在基质上或附近筑巢的鸟类来说,巢捕食是巢失败最常见的原因。因此,雏鸟应该表现出适应能力,以减少巢穴被捕食的风险。我们通过研究红翅黑鹂雏鸟对以下几种声音的乞讨反应来验证雏鸟反捕食者假说:(1)重要的巢捕食者(美洲乌鸦,Corvus brachyrhynchos),(2)很少捕食雏鸟的捕食者(Cooper’s Hawk, Accipiter cooperii),以及(3)非捕食者(Northern flickers, Colaptes auratus)。我们在以下情况下进行了回放:(1)父母双方都在巢中,(2)雄性在巢中,(3)父母双方都不在巢中。在回放之后,我们测量了父母离开后雏鸟乞讨的持续时间(乞讨持续),没有父母在场时正常乞讨的次数(父母缺席的乞讨),以及没有乞讨姿势成分的呼叫(非姿势乞讨)。在播放过程中,当雄性或父母双方都在场时,成年鸟会发出警报,雏鸟在播放《美国乌鸦》和《库珀之鹰》后,父母缺席的乞讨行为明显减少。非姿势乞讨行为在库珀霍克播放后显著减少,但在其他乞讨变量上没有显著差异。当父母双方都不在场时,三种播放方式对非体位乞讨行为的反应无显著差异,但与播放《美国乌鸦》和《库珀鹰》相比,播放《北方闪烁》后父母缺席乞讨行为显著减少。这些结果表明,雏鸟在听到包括库珀鹰在内的捕食者的叫声时,会抑制它们的声音乞求,尽管它们不是常见的巢穴捕食者。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Calling in the face of danger: Do nestling Red-winged Blackbirds (Agelaius phoeniceus) suppress begging in response to predator playbacks?
ABSTRACT Nest predation is the most frequent cause of nest failure in birds such as the Red-winged Blackbird (Agelaius phoeniceus) that nest on or near the substrate. Nestlings should therefore exhibit adaptations to reduce the risk of nest predation. We tested the nestling antipredator hypothesis by examining the begging responses of Red-winged Blackbird nestlings to vocalizations of (1) an important nest predator (American Crow, Corvus brachyrhynchos), (2) a predator that rarely preys on nestlings (Cooper's Hawk, Accipiter cooperii), and (3) a nonpredator (Northern Flicker, Colaptes auratus). We performed playbacks with (1) both parents present at the nest, (2) male at the nest, and (3) neither parent present. Following playback, we measured duration of nestling begging after the parent departed (begging persistence), bouts of otherwise normal begging when no parent was present (parent-absent begging), and calling without postural components of begging (nonpostural begging). When the male or both parents were present during playback, adults responded with alarm calls and nestlings significantly reduced parent-absent begging following American Crow and Cooper's Hawk playbacks. Nonpostural begging was significantly reduced following Cooper's Hawk playback, but there were no significant differences in the other begging variables. When neither parent was present, we found no significant differences in nonpostural begging in response to the 3 playback types, but parent-absent begging was significantly reduced following American Crow and Cooper's Hawk playbacks when compared to Northern Flicker playbacks. These results show that nestlings suppress their vocal begging in response to calls of predators including Cooper's Hawks even though they are not common nest predators.
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