Date: May 23, 2018
Source: American Ornithological Society Publications
Office
Every animal's ultimate goal in
life is to generate offspring to pass on its genetic material to the next
generation. But sometimes, resources are scarce and the task of reproduction is
too difficult or risky. If resources are limited and tough to find, reproductive
efforts may fail anyway. In these situations, it may be in an animal's best
interests to not defend a territory or to breed at all, but rather to focus its
efforts on surviving to the next breeding season. Biologists refer to
individuals without a territory during the breeding season as 'floaters'. A new
study from The Auk: Ornithological Advances presents some of the best
evidence on how changes in environmental conditions, specifically droughts,
impact the social and reproductive behavior of birds.
Tad Theimer of Northern Arizona
University and colleagues monitored a population of Willow Flycatchers over a
five-year period. Each individual in this population was marked with uniquely
colored leg bands and its behavior recorded throughout the breeding season.
Some of these birds defended territories that contained their nests, while
other birds -- the floaters -- moved around the population declining territory
and nest. A severe drought that occurred during the study allowed the
researchers to examine how these birds respond to changes in the environment.
They found there were one and a half times more floaters during the drought
than during years with average rainfall, and that these floaters were more
likely to survive than individuals that tried to nest. When the researchers
compared how many chicks a bird had with their floater status the previous
year, they found that territorial birds had more chicks than floaters -- with
one exception. In the year immediately after the drought, former floaters produced
more chicks.
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