| Literature DB >> 29270207 |
Jelmer M Samplonius1, Iris M Kromhout Van Der Meer1, Christiaan Both1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Social learning allows animals to eavesdrop on ecologically relevant knowledge of competitors in their environment. This is especially important when selecting a habitat if individuals have relatively little personal information on habitat quality. It is known that birds can use both conspecific and heterospecific information for social learning, but little is known about the relative importance of each information type. If provided with the choice between them, we expected that animals should copy the behaviour of conspecifics, as these confer the best information for that species. We tested this hypothesis in the field for Pied Flycatchers Ficedula hypoleuca arriving at their breeding grounds to select a nest box for breeding. We assigned arbitrary symbols to nest boxes of breeding pied flycatchers (conspecifics) and blue and great tits, Cyanistes caeruleus and Parus major (heterospecifics), in 2014 and 2016 in two areas with different densities of tits and flycatchers. After ca 50% of flycatchers had returned and a flycatcher symbol was assigned to their nest box, we gave the later arriving flycatchers the choice between empty nest boxes with either a conspecific (flycatcher) or a heterospecific (tit) symbol.Entities:
Keywords: Birds; Cultural evolution; Ficedula hypoleuca; Habitat selection; Heterospecific attraction; Interspecific competition; Paridae; Passerines; Public information; Social learning
Year: 2017 PMID: 29270207 PMCID: PMC5738223 DOI: 10.1186/s12983-017-0246-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Zool ISSN: 1742-9994 Impact factor: 3.172
Laying dates in April date (1 = 1 April, 31 = 1 May) and number of breeding pairs (in parentheses) of common nest box breeders in all our study plots (1050 nest boxes) in Dwingelderveld, Drents-Friese Wold, and Boswachterij Ruinen [30]. Mean April temperatures are in degrees Centigrade
| Year |
|
|
| April T (°C) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2014 | 35.5 (271) | 12.5 (371) | 11.9 (109) | 11.4 |
| 2016 | 38.7 (308) | 24.0 (410) | 19.7 (83) | 7.9 |
| 2007-2016 | 36.0 (306) | 19.4 (355) | 18.2 (99) | 9.7 |
Fig. 1A male Pied Flycatcher at a nest box with a yellow triangle symbol (left panel), and a female at a nest box with a blue rectangle symbol (right panel)
Fig. 2Experimental setup. Later arriving male Pied Flycatchers (left) could choose between empty nest boxes with a blue rectangle or yellow triangle attached to it (middle). Within a study area, these symbols represented either the manipulated nest site character preference of heterospecific tits (top right) or conspecific early arriving flycatchers (bottom right). The symbol distribution was swapped between areas and years
Overview of the number of tits and flycatchers per area at the start and end of the experiment in two nest box populations shows differences in relative abundance of tits and flycatchers at the start and end of the experiment. Ruinen had more heterospecific (tits) than conspecific (flycatchers) tutors, whereas the opposite was true for Diever
| Ruinen | Diever | Ruinen | Diever | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tits/flycatchers start # | 56 / 27 | 35 / 31 | 60 / 13 | 29 / 26 |
| Tits/flycatchers end # | 56 / 34 | 35 / 49 | 60 / 38 | 29 / 49 |
| Flycatchers/all birds start % | 32.5% | 47.0% | 17.8% | 47.3% |
| Flycatchers/all birds end % | 37.8% | 58.3% | 38.8% | 62.8% |
Frequency of available and chosen nest boxes (chosen boxes/available boxes) by Pied Flycatchers in an experiment providing conspecific and heterospecific symbols on nest boxes. The experiment was conducted in a tit dominated (tit rich) and a Pied Flycatcher dominated (PF rich) area (Table 1)
| 2014 | 2016 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Area |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Tit rich | 5/12 | 2/11 | 7/23 | 18/29 | 7/20 | 25/49 |
| PF rich | 4/11 | 14/16 | 18/27 | 11/30 | 12/25 | 23/55 |
| Total | 9/23 | 16/27 | 25/50 | 29/59 | 19/45 | 48/104 |
Fig. 3Probability that a nest box with a heterospecific (in blue) or conspecific (in red) characteristic in a flycatcher rich (left) or tit rich (right) area is chosen by a male Pied Flycatcher in an experiment providing conspecific and heterospecific symbols on nest boxes. Whiskers indicate 95% Confidence Interval (Table 3). Be aware that data points are independent of each other, and do not necessarily add up to 1. Sample sizes stated in parentheses
The nest box choice of later arriving male Pied Flycatchers in tit and flycatcher dominated areas, modeled as the probability that an available nest box with a certain nest site character was chosen (baseline model conspecific choice, flycatcher dominated). Conspecific information was copied preferentially in flycatcher dominated areas, whereas the opposite was true in tit dominated areas (Fig. 3)
| Box chosen (1/0)a | Estimate (SE) | Z5,149 |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Intercept (flycatcher dominated, conspecific) | 0.580 (0.328) | 1.770 | 0.077 |
| Area tit dominated | −1.391 (0.518) | −2.687 | 0.0072 |
| Information type heterospecific | −1.014 (0.476) | −2.129 | 0.033 |
| Nest material presence | −0.242 (0.370) | −0.656 | 0.512 |
| AreaaInformation type | 2.177 (0.689) | 3.161 | 0.0016 |
aRandom effect variance ± SD ‘1 | year’ = 0.000 ± 0.000