Date: June 20, 2018
Source: American Ornithological Society Publications
Office
Summary:
For
common loons, black flies are a common blood-feeding pest and can cause nest
abandonment and decreased fledging rates. A new study presents some of the best
data to date supporting hypotheses about the effects that black flies have on
common loon nesting behavior and success.
When
sitting on a nest to incubate eggs, a bird is physically stuck and most
vulnerable to attacks of any kind, so coping without stress and other
significant costs is important. For Common Loons, black flies are a common
blood-feeding pest and can cause nest abandonment and decreased fledging rates.
This has impacts on not only individual pair success, but on population
dynamics as well. A new study from The Auk: Ornithological Advances presents
some of the best data to date supporting hypotheses about the effects that
black flies have on Common Loon nesting behavior and success.
Chapman
University's Walter Piper and colleagues monitored Common Loon nests for 25
years in northern Wisconsin, USA. They marked individuals to track each bird's
behavior, nesting success, and interaction with black flies. More than 2,050
nests were included in the study to apply the impacts of black flies on loons'
population level. If the black fly concentration around an individual bird was
high or there was a particularly intense fly outbreak year, loon incubation
time decreased and nest abandonment increased. It was discovered that nest
abandonment could be predicted using lake size, female age, and wind. The team
found that the smaller the lake, the older the female, and the greater the
distance across water that wind has to travel to reach the nest the more likely
the nest will be abandoned. The cost associated with severe black fly outbreaks
appears to be high enough that a nest can be abandoned and a second attempt
made following the peak of the outbreak. The second nest is likely to be in the
original location unless a predator destroyed the nest. In that case, the pair
is more likely to choose a new and hopefully safer nest site.
Lead
author Walter Piper comments, "Black flies, which we think of as a
nuisance and no more, actually impact population reproductive success. This was
a matter of studying an animal for 25 years and almost ignoring one aspect of
their biology -- until you finally look straight at that aspect of biology and
realize it's crucially important! Loons get slammed by black flies, but they
make a very good response by reusing the nest sites where the flies hounded
them, instead of abandoning those sites altogether -- as they do when raccoons
get their eggs. This makes sense, because the raccoons are their main enemies
(that is, egg predation is a more severe problem then black flies), and a safe
nesting site from raccoons is a vital resource."
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