| Literature DB >> 23853395 |
Piotr G Jablonski1, Hyun Jun Cho, Soo Rim Song, Chang Ku Kang, Sang-Im Lee.
Abstract
Aposematic (warning) signals of prey help predators to recognize the defended distasteful or poisonous prey that should be avoided. The evolution of aposematism in the context of predation has been in the center of modern ecology for a long time. But, the possible roles of aposematic signals in other ecological contexts have been largely ignored. Here we address the role of aposematic signals in competition between prey and predators. Bumblebees use visual and auditory aposematic signals to warn predators about their defenses. For 2 years, we observed competition for nestboxes between chemically defended insects, Bombus ardens (and possibly also Bombus ignitus), and cavity nesting birds (Parus minor and Poecile varius). Bumblebees settled in 16 and 9 % of nestboxes (in 2010 and 2011 breeding seasons, respectively) that contained bird nests at the advanced stage of nest building or at the stage of egg laying. Presence of bumblebees prevented the birds from continuing the breeding activities in the nestboxes, while insects took over the birds' nests (a form of kleptoparasitism). Playback experiments showed that the warning buzz by bumblebees contributed to the success in ousting the birds from their nests. This demonstrates that aposematic signals may be beneficial also in the context of resource competition.Entities:
Keywords: Auditory warning signals; Bombus; Distant taxa; Kleptoparasitism; Nestbox; Paridae; Parus minor; Poecile varius; Resource competition
Year: 2013 PMID: 23853395 PMCID: PMC3708279 DOI: 10.1007/s00265-013-1553-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Ecol Sociobiol ISSN: 0340-5443 Impact factor: 2.980
Fig. 1Methods used in the playback experiment. a Miniature flat speaker with a dead bumblebee on a 1-cm toothpick glued onto the speaker’s membrane; b a frame from the video recorded with a camera located above the nest in the nestbox: a female Oriental tit is at the bottom raising from the nest in response to vibrations played back through a speaker-bumblebee device hidden in the nest material (marked by a circle)
Fig. 2Occupation by bumblebees of the nest boxes at different stages: empty box (Empty), a box with a tit nest present before incubation started (Nest Present), or a box at the stage of incubation or brooding by tits (Bird Present). a Data from 2010 breeding season; b data from 2011 breeding season. Bumblebees were detected in 21 % (four nestboxes) of 19 nestboxes with bird nests before incubation occupied by birds in 2010 (Fig. 2a), and in 12 % (three nestboxes) of 25 nestboxes occupied by birds in 2011 (Fig. 2b)
Fig. 3Reaction of incubating females to the playback of bumblebee buzz and to the playback of a common bird song in their nests