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1.
B. Sklepkovych 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》1997,40(5):287-296
Foraging competition in Siberian jay groups was examined in relation to dominance and kinship to determine whether juvenile
offspring, by associating with adults, gained in food acquisition relative to juvenile immigrants. Members of the adult pair
were dominant over juvenile cohort members and males were dominant to females, although an inter-sexual hierarchy, with male
juveniles occasionally overlapping adult females, was suggested. Few competitive asymmetries were found between adults and
retained offspring or adults and immigrant juveniles when they were competing for food together, but in kin and non-kin foraging
groups, respectively. Male offspring visited the bait site more frequently than adult males, and female immigrants spent less
time at the bait site than adult females. Under these circumstances, hoarding activities may limit the ability of alpha members
to control resources. In mixed groups containing both juvenile offspring and juvenile immigrants, no difference was found
in the number of visits made to the bait site, although load sizes and foraging rates were lower for immigrant birds. Retained
juveniles obtained greater load sizes and foraging rates when associating with adults. The social dominance of parents suggests
that they control juvenile foraging. Although offspring benefit in the presence of adults, adults may incur a cost to their
restraint by spending more time at the bait site when competing with immigrants. These results extend conclusions from previous
work describing the role of selective tolerance by adults which relaxes competition with retained offspring in Siberian jay
winter groups. The present findings suggest that offspring benefit in both immediate and future energy gains, which may have
a direct influence on survival.
Received: 18 September 1996 / Accepted after revision: 26 January 1997 相似文献
2.
Neil J. Buckley 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》1997,41(4):267-279
In field tests of the information-center hypothesis (ICH) in south Texas with black vultures (Coragyps atratus) and turkey vultures (Cathartes aura), large carcasses were provided and kept under continuous observation. The use vultures made of these bait sites and their
patterns of arrival were recorded to evaluate predictions derived from the ICH. Turkey vultures discovered most bait sites
(30 of 31) first, but frequently were displaced from the food by later-arriving black vultures. This competitive exclusion
by black vultures limited subsequent feeding opportunities for turkey vultures sufficiently that few (27%) returned on subsequent
days to bait sites they had previously visited. I found no evidence that those turkey vultures that did return to bait sites
acted as leaders for groups of naive birds and led them to bait sites – knowledgeable and naive turkey vultures did not arrive
at bait sites together, and groups arriving at bait sites were not larger on subsequent days than on the first days carcasses
were available. In contrast, a significantly larger percentage (47%) of knowledgeable black vultures returned to bait sites
they had visited on previous days, and the first groups of black vultures arriving at bait sites on subsequent days were significantly
larger than the equivalent groups on first days. Nine flocks of black vultures that arrived on subsequent days at bait sites
before sunrise (which suggests the birds had commuted directly from a roost) contained knowledgeable birds, and two of these
flocks contained both knowledgeable and naive individuals. Overall, 10 of 54 naive tagged black vultures (18.5%) arrived at
bait sites under circumstances that suggested they had followed conspecifics to the food from a roost. However, most black
vultures apparently found carcasses through independent search or by using local enhancement. Therefore, I conclude that while
following from roosts to food sites is a strategy used by black vultures, at this study site it is one they use relatively
infrequently.
Received: 20 February 1997 / Accepted after revision: 28 June 1997 相似文献
3.
We investigated competition for food among two groups of six clone amagos (salmonids), Oncorhynchusmasoumacrostomus, in a laboratory experiment with different rates of food input. We examined the effect of temporal clumping of food resources
on the inequality of food sharing between competitors. Monopolization of food by dominants was greater at a low input rate
(one food item per 10 s) than at a high input rate (1 food item per 1 s). Aggressive behavior by dominants was more frequent
at the low input rate than at the high input rate; its purpose was presumably to interfere with the feeding behavior of subordinates.
We assessed the relative importance of three foraging factors (the number of approaches to food items, the chance per approach
and the gain per chance) in enhancing inequality in food gain between individuals. Dominants had a disproportionately high
chance per approach and gain per chance at the low input rate, but not at the high input rate. The chance of obtaining a food
item per approach depended on how many competitors approached simultaneously. The gain per chance depended on the competitive
ability of the approaching fish. There was an interaction between these components, such that the number of approaches affected
the chance per approach and gain per chance. We evaluated the independent effect of the chance per approach, and showed that
it was higher for dominants than for subordinates at the low input rate, but not at the high input rate. This implies that
subordinates changed their behavior and became more likely to avoid approaching food at the same time as dominants at the
low input rate.
Received: 13 August 1996 / Accepted after revision: 30 November 1996 相似文献
4.
Relatedness, polyandry and extra-group paternity in the cooperatively-breeding white-browed scrubwren (Sericornis frontalis ) 总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3
Linda A. Whittingham Peter O. Dunn Robert D. Magrath 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》1997,40(4):261-270
We used DNA fingerprinting to examine the genetic parentage and mating system of the cooperatively breeding white-browed
scrubwren, Sericornis frontalis, in Canberra, Australia. Our analyses revealed a remarkable variety of mating tactics and social organization. Scrubwrens
bred in pairs or multi-male groups that consisted of a female and two or more males. Females were always unrelated to the
pair male or alpha (dominant) male. Among multi-male groups we found three different mating tactics. Firstly, when alpha and
beta (subordinate) males were unrelated, they usually shared paternity in the brood. This resulted in both males gaining reproductive
benefits directly. Secondly, when beta males were not related to the female but were related to the alpha males, beta males
sired offspring in some broods. In this situation, beta males gained reproductive benefits both directly and potentially indirectly
(through the related alpha male). Thirdly, when beta males were related to the female or both the female and alpha male, they
remained on their natal territory and did not sire any offspring. Thus beta males gained only indirect reproductive benefits.
Overall, when group members were related closely, the dominant male monopolized reproductive success, whereas when the members
were not related closely the two males shared paternity equally. This positive association between monopolization of reproduction
and relatedness is predicted by models of reproductive skew, but has not been reported previously within a single population
of birds. Other cooperatively breeding birds with both closely related and unrelated helpers may show a similar variety of
mating tactics. Finally, we found that extra-group paternity was more common in pairs (24% of young) than in multi-male groups
(6%), and we discuss three possible reasons for this difference.
Received: 21 May 1996 / Accepted after revision: 14 December 1996 相似文献
5.
José L. Tella Manuela G. Forero José A. Donázar Juan J. Negro Fernando Hiraldo 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》1997,40(4):253-260
We examined the causes, costs and benefits of adoption in the altricial lesser kestrel Falco naumanni. Specifically, we tested the intergenerational conflict hypothesis, proposed to explain adoption in some birds. Adoptions
involved 76% of the nests and 51% of the nestlings at a mean age of 25 days (12 days before fledging). Nest-switching nestlings
were not in poorer body condition, more parasitized or younger than their siblings, and body condition and prey delivery rates
of their parents did not differ from those of other parents. In the foster nest, adopted nestlings did not benefit from higher
feeding rates or a prolongation of the nestling period. They did not have fewer nest-mates or achieve higher rank within the
new brood. Thus, adopted nestlings did not improve their body condition and survival. Adult lesser kestrels seemed unable
to finely discriminate beween their own and alien chicks. Foster parents bore the cost of an increase of prey delivery rates,
although it did not affect their survival or subsequent reproductive performance. Therefore, our results do not support the
intergenerational conflict hypothesis, and suggest that adoption in this species is non-adaptive. Traditionally, the lesser
kestrel bred in cliffs where movement among nest-sites was restricted. Nowadays, about half of the colonies are in tiled roofs
which facilitate nest-switching by nestlings. The high rate of adoptions may thus be explained as reproductive errors associated
with the recent occupation of a new breeding habitat.
Received: 3 May 1996 / Accepted after revision: 19 January 1997 相似文献
6.
Control of reproduction in social insect colonies: individual and collective relatedness preferences in the paper wasp, Polistes annularis 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
David C. Queller J. M. Peters Carlos R. Solís Joan E. Strassmann 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》1997,40(1):3-16
Social insect colonies often have one or a few queens. How these queens maintain their reproductive monopoly, when other
colony members could gain by sharing in the reproduction, is not generally known. DNA microsatellite genotyping is used to
determine reproductive interests of various classes of colony members in the paper wasp, Polistes annularis. The relatedness estimates show that the best outcome for most individuals is to be the reproductive egg-layer. For workers,
this depends on the sex of offspring: they should prefer to lay their own male eggs, but are indifferent if the queen lays
the female eggs. The next-best choice is usually to support the current queen. As a rule, subordinates and workers should
prefer the current queen to reproduce over other candidates (though subordinates have no strong preference for the queen over
other subordinates, and workers may prefer other workers as a source of male eggs). This result supports the theory that reproductive
monopoly stems from the collective preferences of non-reproductives, who suppress each other in favor of the queen. However,
we reject the general hypothesis of collective worker control in this species because its predictions about who should succeed
after the death of the present queen are not upheld. The first successor is a subordinate foundress even though workers should
generally prefer a worker successor. If all foundresses have died, an older worker succeeds as queen, in spite of a collective
worker preference for a young worker. The results support the previous suggestion that age serves as a conventional cue serving
to reduce conflict over queen succession.
Received: 3 May 1996 / Accepted after revision: 22 September 1996 相似文献
7.
Seasonally breeding predators, which are limited in the time available for provisioning young at a central location, and
by the fasting abilities of the young, are likely to maximize energy delivery to the young by maximizing the rate of energy
delivery averaged over the whole period of investment. Reduction in food availability or increased foraging costs will alter
the optimal behavior of individuals. This study examined the behavioral adaptations of a diving predator, the Antarctic fur
seal, to increased foraging costs during lactation. One group of mothers (n=5, treatment) was fitted with additional drag to increase the cost of transport in comparison with a control group (n=8). At the scales of the individual dives, the treatment group made more shorter, shallower (< 30 m) dives. Compensation for
slower swimming speeds was achieved by diving at a steeper angle. Overall, diving behavior conformed to several specific theoretical
predictions but there were also departures from theory, particularly concerning swimming speed during diving. Diving behavior
appears to be adjusted to maximize the proportion of time spent at the bottom of dives. At the scale of diving bouts, no difference
was observed between the treatment and control groups in terms of the frequency and duration of bouts and there was also no
difference between the two groups in terms of the proportion of time spent diving. At the scale of complete foraging cycles,
time taken to return to the pup was significantly longer in the treatment group but there was no difference in the rate of
delivery of energy (measured from pup growth rate) to the pups in each group. Since mothers in the treatment group did not
use significantly more body reserves, we conclude that behavioral adjustments at the scale of individual dives allowed mothers
in the treatment group to compensate for the additional foraging costs. Pup growth rate appears to be less sensitive to the
foraging conditions experienced by mothers than foraging trip duration.
Received: 14 June 1996 / Accepted after revision: 16 November 1996 相似文献
8.
Russell C. Titus C. Ray Chandler Ellen D. Ketterson Val Nolan Jr. 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》1997,41(3):165-169
Frequency of singing by birds may vary with reproductive stage in ways that reflect variation in the functions of song in
intersexual and intrasexual communication. In dark-eyed juncos (Junco hyemalis) high-amplitude song is produced only by males. To investigate the function of this song, we tested whether fertility of
females affected singing by their mates or by neighboring males. Using focal observations, song censuses, and radiotracking
data, we determined whether song production varied between and among periods when females were fertile and non-fertile. Our
findings show that males do not increase song production when their mates are fertile, nor do they increase song production
when neighboring females are fertile. These results suggest that male juncos do not signal their intent to defend territories
(or mates) more when females are fertile and that they do not use song to advertise to specific potential participants in
extra-pair fertilizations.
Received: 13 February 1997 / Accepted after revison: 2 May 1997 相似文献
9.
Janette Wenrick Boughman 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》1997,40(1):61-70
Individually distinctive vocalizations are ubiquitous; however, group distinctive calls have rarely been demonstrated. Under
some conditions, selection should favor calls indicating social group membership in animals that forage in groups. Greater
spear-nosed bats (Phyllostomus hastatus) give calls that appear to facilitate recognition of social group mates who are unrelated. Females give loud broadband (4–18 kHz)
vocalizations termed screech calls when departing on foraging trips and at foraging sites. Screech calls help to establish
foraging groups among social group members, and to maintain contact over the long distances they travel while foraging. I
test two hypotheses about how screech calls may be structured to convey caller identity. Individual calls may be distinct
and group members may learn to recognize each individual's calls and to associate the individual with the social group. Alternatively,
groups may give distinct calls and individuals within groups may share call characteristics. To test these hypotheses I conducted
multivariate acoustic analysis of multiple calls from 28 bats from three social groups. Although the ubiquity of individually
distinctive calls in other taxa makes this result more likely, the results reveal that group calls are highly distinctive.
Individual bats within groups are statistically indistinguishable. Calls appear to decrease slightly in frequency as bats
age. Call convergence among unrelated group mates implies vocal learning in this species.
Received: 28 March 1996 / Accepted after revision: 6 October 1996 相似文献
10.
Carola Borries 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》1997,41(3):139-150
In the seasonally breeding langur (Presbytis entellus) population of Ramnagar, South Nepal, where multimale groups prevail, 25 attacks on 11 infants (including one actual killing)
by seven adult males were witnessed in five groups by six observers between 1990 and 1996. Circumstantial evidence also indicates
three additional attempts at infanticide and in seven additional cases infanticide was presumed or likely. Infanticide presumably
accounted for 30.8–62.5% of infant mortality in the first 2 years of life. Most attackers (91.4%) were residents of the infants'
group and had immigrated after the infants had been born (75.0%) or conceived (25.0%). Thus, they were not related to the
victims. The interbirth interval was shortened if an infant died either prior to September of its 1st year of life (mean = 1.2
years), or its 2nd year (mean = 2.0) and even its 3rd year (mean = 2.4). All attackers remained in the group at least until
the next mating season; high-ranking males maintained their dominance rank and lower-ranking males rose in rank. Since rank
and mating success were correlated and rank and reproductive success might be correlated, all attackers had a good chance
of siring the next infant of the victims' mothers and could thus have benefited by their action. Infanticide seems to be a
male reproductive strategy at Ramnagar. Infanticide has never before been reported among seasonally breeding langurs living
at such low densities. This is also the first detailed report of infanticide as a male reproductive strategy in a seasonally
breeding primate population.
Received: 19 December 1996 / Accepted after revision: 7 June 1997 相似文献
11.
Besides the "normal" challenge of obtaining adequate intake rates in a patchy and dangerous world, shorebirds foraging in intertidal habitats face additional environmental hurdles. The tide forces them to commute between a roosting site and feeding grounds, twice a day. Moreover, because intertidal food patches are not all available at the same time, shorebirds should follow itineraries along the best patches available at a given time. Finally, shorebirds need additional energy stores in order to survive unpredictable periods of bad weather, during which food patches are covered by extreme tides. In order to model such tide-specific decisions, we applied stochastic dynamic programming in a spatially explicit context. Two assumptions were varied, leading to four models. First, birds had either perfect (ideal) or no (non-ideal) information about the intake rate at each site. Second, traveling between sites was either for free or incurred time and energy costs (non-free). Predictions were generated for three aspects of foraging: area use, foraging routines, and energy stores. In general, non-ideal foragers should feed most intensely and should maintain low energy stores. If traveling for such birds is free, they should feed at a random site; otherwise, they should feed close to their roost. Ideal foragers should concentrate their feeding around low tide (especially when free) and should maintain larger energy stores (especially when non-free). If traveling for such birds is free, they should feed at the site offering the highest intake rate; otherwise, they should trade off travel costs and intake rate. Models were parameterized for Red Knots (Calidris canutus) living in the Dutch Wadden Sea in late summer, an area for which detailed, spatially explicit data on prey densities and tidal heights are available. Observations of radio-marked knots (area use) and unmarked knots (foraging routines, energy stores) showed the closest match with the ideal/non-free model. We conclude that knots make state-dependent decisions by trading off starvation against foraging-associated risks, including predation. Presumably, knots share public information about resource quality that enables them to behave in a more or less ideal manner. We suggest that our modeling approach may be applicable in other systems where resources fluctuate in space and time. 相似文献
12.
Scott B. Terrill 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》1987,21(1):1-11
Summary I investigated the effect of restricted food and social dominance on nocturnal migratory activity (Zugunruhe) in dark-eyed juncos (Junco hyemalis) in late fall and winter. Highly restricted food tended to increase Zugunruhe in both dominant and subordinate members of pairs, however, subordinates showed significantly more migratory activity than dominants or solitary controls. Further, subordinate birds continued Zugunruhe after dominants and solitary controls had ceased this activity for the remainder of the winter. From mid-December through mid-January when birds had access to food ad lib, migratory activity decreased significantly. These results indicate that toward the end of fall migration, migratory behavior is subject to ecological and social conditions that influence the probability of overwinter survival. Presumably, such a system enables these birds to minimize the distance of migration; at the same time, they are able to track a relatively unpredictable, temperate, winter environment by prolonging migration if necessary. 相似文献
13.
A molecular genetic analysis of social structure, dispersal, and interpack relationships of the African wild dog (Lycaon pictus ) 总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7
Derek J. Girman M. G. L. Mills Eli Geffen Robert K. Wayne 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》1997,40(3):187-198
The African wild dog is a highly social, pack-living predator of the African woodland and savannah. The archetypal wild dog
pack consists of a single dominant breeding pair, their offspring, and non-breeding adults who are either offspring or siblings
of one of the breeding pair. Non-breeding adults cooperate in hunting, provisioning and the protection of young. From these
observations follows the prediction that the genetic structure of wild dogs packs should resemble that of a multigenerational
family, with all same-sexed adults and offspring within a pack related as sibs or half-sibs. Additionally, a higher kinship
between females from neighboring packs should be evident if females tend to have small dispersal distances relative to males.
We test these predictions through analysis of mitochondrial DNA control region sequences and 14 microsatellite loci in nine
wild dog packs from Kruger National Park, Republic of South Africa. We show that as predicted, African wild dog packs generally
consist of an unrelated alpha male and female, subdominant close relatives, and offspring of the breeding pair. Sub-dominant
wild dogs occasionally reproduce but their offspring rarely survive to 1 year of age. Relatedness influences the timing and
location of dispersal events as dispersal events frequently coincide with a change in pack dominance hierarchy and dispersers
often move to areas with a high proportion of close relatives.
Received: 22 February 1996 / Accepted after revision: 16 November 1996 相似文献
14.
J. E. Strassmann Carlos R. Solís C. R. Hughes Keith F. Goodnight David C. Queller 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》1997,40(2):71-77
Colonies of social insects are sometimes viewed as superorganisms. The birth, reproduction, and death of colonies can be studied with demographic measures analogous to those normally applied to individuals, but two additional questions arise. First, how do adaptive colony demographies arise from individual behaviors? Second, since these superorganisms are made up of genetically distinct individuals, do conflicts within the colony sometimes modify and upset optima for colonies? The interplay between individual and superindividual or colony interests appears to be particularly complex in neotropical, swarm-founding, epiponine wasps such as Parachartergus colobopterus. In a long-term study of this species, we censused 286 nests to study colony-level reproduction and survivorship and evaluated individual-level factors by assessing genetic relatedness and queen production. Colony survivorship followed a negative exponential curve very closely, indicating type II survivorship. This pattern is defined by constant mortality across ages and is more characteristic of birds and other vertebrates than of insects. Individual colonies are long-lived, lasting an average of 347 days, with a maximum of over 4.5 years. The low and constant levels of colony mortality arise in part from colony initiation by swarming, nesting on protected substrates, and an unusual expandable nest structure. The ability to requeen rapidly was also important; relatedness data suggest that colonies requeen on average once every 9–12 months. We studied whether colony optima with respect to the timing of reproduction could be upset by individual worker interests. In this species, colonies are normally polygynous but new queens are produced only after a colony reaches the monogynous state, a result which is in accord with the genetic interests of workers. Therefore colony worker interests might drive colonies to reproduce whenever queen number happens to cycled down to one rather than at the season that is otherwise optimal. However, we found reproduction to be heavily concentrated in the rainy season. The number of new colonies peaked in this season as did the percentages of males and queens. Relatedness among workers reached a seasonal low of 0.21–0.27, reflecting the higher numbers of laying queens. This seasonality was achieved in part by a modest degree of synchrony in the queen reduction cycle. Worker relatedness reached peaks of around 0.4 in the dry season, reflecting a decrease to a harmonic mean queen number of about 2.5. Thus, a significant number of colonies must be approaching monogyny entering the rainy season. Coupled with polygynous colonies rearing only males (split sex ratios), this makes it possible for a colony cycle driven by selfish worker interests to be consistent with concentrating colony reproduction during a favorable season. 相似文献
15.
Indriķis Krams 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》2000,48(2):147-153
The risk of predation may influence the acquisition of energy and the feeding activity of animals. Feeding activity and body
reserves of wintering great tits Parus major in response to the priority to food access were studied in two areas differing in incidence of predators. The one-predator
area contained sparrowhawks Accipiter nisus only, whereas the two-predator area contained both sparrowhawks and pygmy owls Glaucidium passerinum, whose hunting periods overlap at dawn and dusk. In the two-predator area dominant great tits arrived at feeders significantly
later in the morning, and left earlier in the evening, than their subordinate flock-mates. Hence, feeding day length of dominants
was found to be significantly shorter. The reverse was true for the one-predator area. In addition, dominants carried significantly
greater reserves than subordinates in the area inhabited by two predators. Factors constraining subcutaneous energy reserves
were also studied in removal experiments. After the removal of dominant individuals, subordinate great tits did not reduce
their body reserves in the two predator area. In contrast, subordinate great tits significantly reduced evening body reserves
in the single-predator area. I concluded that the presence of the two predators increases unpredictability in feeding conditions
for great tits. Dominant individuals responded to this by shortening their feeding day and increasing body reserves at dusk.
Received: 8 December 1999 / Received in revised form: 15 March 2000 / Accepted: 31 March 2000 相似文献
16.
Quality-indicating sexually selected traits may have their honesty maintained by their costs or by an inherent “revealing”
nature. Long tails in birds are usually considered to be costly “handicaps”, but may have additional potential as revealing
indicators through the incidence of breakage. Magpies Pica pica with unbroken and less abraded tails paired earlier, but did not nest or fledge young earlier than pairs with tails in poorer
condition. Pairs mated assortatively by tail quality, and magpies with very broken tails remained unmated. Pairs in which
both members had almost undamaged tails fledged more offspring than pairs with poorer tails. Tail quality did not correlate
with the extent of any habitat type in the territory. Tail damage thus honestly indicated a magpie's reproductive potential,
and the data are consistent with its having a role in mate choice, as a revealing element of tail morphology.
Received: 28 March 1996 / Accepted after revision: 9 December 1996 相似文献
17.
Reproductive dominance and differential ovicide in the communally breeding burying beetle Nicrophorus tomentosus 总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4
Michelle Pellissier Scott 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》1997,40(5):313-320
Communal breeding can be characterized by the division of reproduction among cooperating individuals and, if the distribution
of reproduction is inequitable, by the mechanisms for achieving skewed reproductive success. The burying beetle (Nicrophorus tomentosus) is a facultative communal breeder. Unrelated adults, especially females, provide extensive parental care to broods of mixed
parentage. The frequency and degree of reproductive skew between two females were examined experimentally. On medium-size
carcasses, the proportion of eggs attributed to each female was not significantly different from random in 42% of the broods,
skewed in 42% and not shared in 16%. Although reproduction was usually skewed in favor of the larger female, the relative
sizes of the two females did not predict the degree of skew. On large carcasses, the proportion of eggs attributed to each
female was not different from random in 87% of the broods and weakly skewed in 13%. Several mechanisms for biasing reproductive
success were investigated. Females increase the proportion of their offspring in the brood by committing differential ovicide.
Secondly, burying and preparing a carcass cooperatively stimulates ovarian development of the larger female and slows it for
the smaller female, reducing or delaying oviposition by the subordinate. Thirdly, larger females are more likely to be dominant
and are more fecund than smaller females.
Received: 20 July 1996 / Accepted after revision: 30 November 1996 相似文献
18.
Mikael Hake 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》1996,39(2):71-76
Relationships between social status and levels of body reserves stored by members of greenfinch (Carduelis chloris) flocks in winter were investigated. In addition, the adjustment of reserves by birds of different rank to experimental changes
in food predictability and to changed weather conditions were examined. Birds with low social status carried overall larger
body reserves than high-ranked birds. The results of the experiments suggest that this was mainly because subordinates, due
to their low priority to food access, perceived future foraging success as less predictable than dominants. In response to
severe weather, which probably increased the risk of starvation for birds, dominants temporarily increased their reserves
more than subordinates. This response also indicated that birds with low social status carried larger reserves than high-ranked
birds, and demonstrated that dominants could increase food intake when there was a risk of energetic shortfall. The results
suggest that fattening strategies in greenfinches depend on social status. In winter, subordinates may be forced to carry
larger reserves than dominants to safeguard against social constraints in access to food during critical times. As body reserves
may be costly to carry and acquire, this should reduce the probability of surviving the winter for subordinates compared to
dominants.
Received: 2 March 1995/Accepted after revision: 13 April 1996 相似文献
19.
Sexual cohabitation as mate-guarding in the leaf-curling spider Phonognatha graeffei Keyserling (Araneoidea, Araneae) 总被引:1,自引:1,他引:1
The leaf-curling spider Phonognatha graeffei incorporates a twisted leaf into the central hub of its orb-web that is used as a retreat. This species is unusual among orb-weaving
spiders because males cohabit in the leaf retreat with both immature and mature females, mating with the former shortly after
the female molts. Cohabitation appears to be a form of mate-guarding because cohabiting males respond agonistically to rival
males that venture onto the web, and their behaviour depends upon the reproductive status of the female; males defending immature
females are more aggressive than those defending virgin, adult females. Males copulate with previously mated females for significantly
longer than with virgin females. Females may cannibalise cohabiting males, which occurs independently of whether the female
has been deprived of food. Females that cannibalise a single male do not have a higher fecundity than non-cannibalistic females.
Received: 2 February 1996 / Accepted after revision: 27 October 1996 相似文献
20.
Codas, which are patterned series of clicks, were recorded from female and immature sperm whales (Physeter macrocephalus) in a number of locations around the South Pacific Ocean and in the Caribbean Sea. Using K-means cluster analysis, 3,644 codas were categorized based on the number of clicks and their patterning. There were 30 resulting
types of coda. The numbers of codas of the different types recorded were used to construct repertoires for each recording
session, day, group of whales, place, area, and ocean. Strong group-specific dialects, which seem to persist over periods
of years, were apparent, overlaid on weaker geographical variation. Significant differences in repertoire were found between
the Caribbean and the Pacific Ocean. Sperm whales now join killer whales (Orcinus orca) as the only cetacean species in which dialects (differences in vocal repertoire among neighboring, potentially interacting
groups) have been found.
Received: 13 June 1996 / Accepted after revision: 19 January 1997 相似文献