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Patterns of Nest Predation on Artificial and Natural Nests in Forests
Authors:DAWN M BURKE  KEN ELLIOTT†  LEVI MOORE†  WENDY DUNFORD‡  ERICA NOL§  JUDITH PHILLIPS§  STEPHEN HOLMES  KATHRYN FREEMARK††
Institution:Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources, Applied Research and Development Branch, 659 Exeter Road, London, Ontario N6E 1L3, Canada, email;Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources, Science and Information Branch, 659 Exeter Road, London, Ontario N6E 1L3, Canada;Landscape Ecology Laboratory, Ottawa-Carleton Institute of Biology, Carleton University, 1125 Colonel By Drive, Ottawa, Ontario K1S 5B6, Canada;Biology Department, Trent University, Peterborough, Ontario K9J 7B8, Canada;Natural Resources Canada, Canadian Forest Service, 1219 Queen Street E., Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario P6A 2E5, Canada;National Wildlife Research Centre, Canadian Wildlife Service, 351 St. Joseph Boulevard, Hull, Quebec K1A 0H3, Canada
Abstract:Abstract:  Artificial nest experiments have been used in an attempt to understand patterns of predation affecting natural nests. A growing body of literature suggests that neither relative rates nor patterns of predation are the same for artificial and natural nests. We studied nest predation and daily mortality rates and patterns at real and artificial ground and shrub nests to test the validity of artificial nest experiments. We monitored 1667 artificial and 344 natural nests, over seven trials, in three regions, across 58 sites in Ontario. We controlled for many of the factors thought to be responsible for previously reported differences between predation rates on natural and artificial nests. Although artificial nests in our study resembled natural nests, contained eggs of appropriate size, shape, and color of target bird species, and were placed in similar microhabitats as natural nests, the rates of predation on these nests did not parallel rates on natural nests for any region in terms of absolute rate or pattern. Predation rates on artificial nests did not vary between years, as they tended to for natural nests, and the magnitude of predation pressure on artificial ground nests compared with shrub nests did not show the same pattern as that on natural nests. In general, rates of predation on artificial nests were significantly higher than on natural nests. Our results suggest that conclusions derived from artificial nest studies may be unfounded. Given that many influential ideas in predation theory are based on results of artificial nest experiments, it may be time to redo these experiments with natural nests.
Keywords:artificial nest experiment  forest bird  natural nests  nest predation  nest success
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