首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
L. G. Grimes 《Ostrich》2013,84(3-4):170-175
Grimes, L. G. 1973. The breeding of Heuglin's Masked Weaver and its nesting association with the Red Weaver Ant. Ostrich 44: 170–175.

The breeding season of Heuglin “s Masked Weaver Ploceus heuglini at Legon began in the latter half of the major dry season in January and February; continued through the main wet season and ceased in late August and for the rest of the year. The Accra colony had a similar breeding activity but in addition was active for a short period in November which had ended by mid-December. Although the majority of males formed colonies in which the number of males ranged from two to twenty, solitary breeding occurred equally frequently. Most males within the Legon colony, and possibly this is true for all colonies, were polygynous while most solitary males were monogamous. More nests were built by each male than the number of females involved in the polygyny.

A close nesting association with the Red Weaver Ant Oecophylla longinoda existed and the data suggested that the weaver sought the ant. Two cases were found of nesting association with the wasp Belanogaster grisens.  相似文献   

2.
M. DA CAMARA-SMEETS 《Ibis》1982,124(3):241-251
From August to October 1975, 31 nesting colonies of Village Weavers were identified within an area of 3000 km2, south of Lake Chad in Africa. The number of nests and the productivity of each colony were estimated by means of several samplings made during the course of the nesting season. Differences between bush colonies and village colonies are not relevant. The average length of the nesting season is 70 days. In each colony the number of nests increases during the first month and then decreases. The average number of fledging attempts is four per colony, with a period of about ten days from one to another. On a regional scale, breeding periods and fledging attempts are well synchronized. Each nest carries an average of 2.4 eggs and 1.9 young, the difference occurring only at hatching. Due to regional synchronism, the period of most intensive reproductive activity, at which the number of nests reaches its maximum, can be determined.  相似文献   

3.
Howman, H.R.G., & Begg, G.W. 1995 Intra-seasonal and inter-seasonal nest renovation in the Masked Weaver, Ploceus velatus. Ostrich 66:122-128.

This paper describes a series of observations relating to the intra-seasonal and inter-seasonal renovation of nests by a single male Masked Weaver Ploceus velatus, over a period of three breeding seasons (1991 to 1993). These data shed new light on the nest building techniques and nest building behaviour of the species and demonstrate that nest building can be flexible in the same individual. It is suggested that the partial demolition of nests and the renovation of nests would be advantageous because of the energetic savings.  相似文献   

4.
DAVID C. HOUSTON 《Ibis》1990,132(1):36-41
Breeding by Rüppell's Griffon Vultures Gyps rueppellii is synchronized but the time of breeding of colonies in the Serengeti region of Tanzania has changed by 5 months over the period between 1969–1970 and 1985. During this interval there have been considerable changes in the ungulate populations within the feeding range of the vultures, resulting in an increase to the food supply available to the birds. It is suggested that this species may have two alternative breeding seasons, the selective value of each depending on the magnitude of the food supply.  相似文献   

5.
布氏田鼠洞群内社群结构变动与序位的研究   总被引:10,自引:4,他引:6  
本文通过野外标志流放和实验室观察,研究了洞群内布氏田鼠社群结构的变动及其序位作用。该鼠社群结构变动有明显的季节性。繁殖期为变动期, 贮草期为稳定期。变动期在繁殖前期和繁殖盛期形成2个变动高峰。前者主要是成体(包括老体) 雄鼠的迁移, 后者迁移主体是亚成体鼠。贮草期间洞群成员相对稳定, 迁移减少。社群序位表现为2~3 个等级,即优势鼠、次优势鼠和从属鼠。优势鼠以老体雌鼠为多。繁殖期, 50%以上的从属鼠在陌生鼠群中提高了序位, 30%优势鼠可在陌生鼠中保持高序位。非繁殖期, 进入陌生群后鼠间争斗激烈, 获得优势的比例明显降低。  相似文献   

6.
G. L. Maclean 《Ostrich》2013,84(3-4):219-240
Maclean, G. L. 1973. The Sociable Weaver, Part 3: Breeding biology and moult. Ostrich 44: 219–240.

Rain or some associated phenomenon is the principal Zeitgeber releasing breeding in the Sociable Weaver. The species does not breed in the absence of rain. The same nest chambers are used for breeding as are used for roosting throughout the year. The Sociable Weaver is monogamous. The clutch size varies from two to six eggs, larger clutches being more common after good rains than in relatively poorer breeding periods. Food supply may therefore be the proximate factor regulating clutch size. Replacement clutches are not necessarily smaller than first clutches. The mean clutch size within a breeding period decreases with an apparent decrease in food supply. The parents share parental duties about equally. Up to four successive broods may be raised in a single breeding period; a breeding period may last up to nine months and may occur at any time of the year according to the somewhat erratic rainfall which averages about 226 mm per year in the study area.

First broods help their parents to feed later broods; fourth brood chicks may therefore be fed by as many as 11 birds (nine young and two parents). This has survival value especially toward the end of a breeding period when food is scarce. Of similar value is the habit of starting incubation with the first or second egg of the clutch; in a relatively poor season older chicks will survive while younger ones will starve, thereby effectively and quickly reducing brood size. Young birds moult into adult plumage at four months, but do not normally leave the home colony. The sexes are indistinguishable at all ages, but there is an approximate ratio of eight males to five females in the study area.

Wing moult is slow: each remex takes about a month for replacement. Body moult occurs within the space of a month, usually after rain while the birds are breeding. Primary remiges are moulted proximo-distally from 1 to 9; secondaries are moulted disto-proximally from 1 to 6. Body moult is antero-posterior with the dorsal surface slightly in advance of the ventral surface.  相似文献   

7.
Variation in queen number alters the genetic structure of social insect colonies, which in turn affects patterns of kin-selected conflict and cooperation. Theory suggests that shifts from single- to multiple-queen colonies are often associated with other changes in the breeding system, such as higher queen turnover, more local mating, and restricted dispersal. These changes may restrict gene flow between the two types of colonies and it has been suggested that this might ultimately lead to sympatric speciation. We performed a detailed microsatellite analysis of a large population of the ant Formica selysi, which revealed extensive variation in social structure, with 71 colonies headed by a single queen and 41 by multiple queens. This polymorphism in social structure appeared stable over time, since little change in the number of queens per colony was detected over a five-year period. Apart from queen number, single- and multiple-queen colonies had very similar breeding systems. Queen turnover was absent or very low in both types of colonies. Single- and multiple-queen colonies exhibited very small but significant levels of inbreeding, which indicates a slight deviation from random mating at a local scale and suggests that a small proportion of queens mate with related males. For both types of colonies, there was very little genetic structuring above the level of the nest, with no sign of isolation by distance. These similarities in the breeding systems were associated with a complete lack of genetic differentiation between single- and multiple-queen colonies, which provides no support for the hypothesis that change in queen number leads to restricted gene flow between social forms. Overall, this study suggests that the higher rates of queen turnover, local mating, and population structuring that are often associated with multiple-queen colonies do not appear when single- and multiple-queen colonies still coexist within the same population, but build up over time in populations consisting mostly of multiple-queen colonies.  相似文献   

8.
A. BROSSET 《Ibis》1978,120(1):27-37
A comparative study was made of social organization during breeding among the genus Malimbus. In M. nitens, the male chooses the nest site, builds the nest alone, guards the nest during incubation, and feeds the young; the female incubates, broods alone and with the male feeds the young. In M. malimbicus, the male chooses the nest site, builds the nest with the female and guards the nest; the female builds the nest with the male, but incubates alone. In M. racheliae and M. cassini, the nest is built by one female and a multi-male party of two or three. One male drives off the other males when the nest is completed. One male and one female incubate alternately. The female seems to be the leader of the building group, and works like a male. In M. coronatus, the nest is built by a mixed party of males and females (3–6 birds), all working together without any overt leadership. Only one male and one female however, incubate, brood and feed the young. In their morphology and behaviour, Malimbus spp. are close to the weaver birds of the genus Ploceus. M. nitens seems the least evolved species while M. cassini and M. coronatus are behaviourally the most evolved. In the last species, which has a very elaborate nest, the pair of breeding birds is helped by one to four other birds. These helpers are birds in full adult plumage, and are probably capable of breeding and may do so at another period in the long breeding season of at least six months.  相似文献   

9.
ROGER M. EVANS 《Ibis》1982,124(4):491-501
Black-billed Gulls breeding in large dense colonies on river beds in New Zealand were found to have a high rate of colony desertion early in the nesting cycle. The hypothesis is developed that individuals faced with possible desertion after they have begun to nest can reduce the likelihood of being deserted by delaying their nesting activities until a large number of others is also ready to nest. This interpretation is developed into a graphic model to show that colony desertion can thereby produce a strong selection pressure favouring highly synchronized nesting. This model successfully predicts onset synchrony, subcolony formation, occurrence of complete colony desertions mainly early in the season, occurrence of partial colony desertions, and the existence of nester non-nester conflict over whether or not to desert. Unstable food appears to be the most likely cause of colony desertion in Black-billed Gulls. Black-billed Gulls are similar, in varying degrees to Sandwich, Royal and White-fronted Terns. Convergent traits include tendencies to occupy colonies rapidly and synchronously, reduced site tenacity, and the use of open and often unstable nesting habitats. The links described here between desertion and synchrony may be relevant for some other species.  相似文献   

10.
Extending a previous study of the thermal significance of the nest of the Sociable Weaver carried out during the winter, we measured temperature and humidity in the matrix and chambers of a large nest of this species in the Kalahari Gemsbok National Park, South Africa, during the austral summer of December 1973. Air temperatures outside the nest ranged from 16 to 33.5°C but temperatures in occupied chambers varied over a range of only 7 or 8°C and remained well within the zone of thermal neutrality for a passerine bird of this size. Compared to outside air temperatures, those within the nest matrix were lower during the day and higher at night. Thus, the nest ameliorates the effects of external temperatures and allows maintenance inside the chambers of a range of temperature favourable to the birds. In winter we found up to five roosting adults per chamber, with some chambers left empty. In the same nest in summer we found no more than two adults per chamber but virtually all chambers were occupied. The principal mechanism for maintaining chambers within the zone of minimal energetic cost is changes in the number of birds in the nest chambers at night. Humidity inside the occupied and unoccupied chambers was somewhat higher in the former but always less than that of outside air in both cases. Air movement through the desiccated nest materials causes uptake by these materials of most of the water vapour introduced by the birds, and this moisture is dissipated to the outside during the day so that the nest remains dry. The highly social and colonial habits of the birds and their year-round occupancy and maintenance of the nest favour a system of opportunistic breeding that may be initiated by rainfall at any season. Larger nests provide the most favourable environment for energy conservation and successful reproduction. Even the largest nests, however, do not prevent predation during the warm season by snakes such as the Cape Cobra, which may consume all the eggs and young in all the chambers of a large nest. The effects of such heavy predation may be offset by the birds' capability for breeding during times too cold for reptile activity. It seems likely that in smaller nests such as those on telephone poles, lack of predation would favour summer breeding while thermal problems would limit breeding success in winter. In larger nests, breeding success may be lower in summer because of predation and higher in winter when reptile predation is lacking and thermal problems are minimized by the nest structure. The large nest not only makes possible the success of the Sociable Weaver in desert areas, but the nest could only exist in such areas and the species' range is thereby restricted. Higher humidity and heavier rainfall would cause fermentation within the nest mass, loss of its thermoregulatory advantages, and ultimately its decomposition and destruction. Therefore, the unique nesting system of the Sociable Weaver appears to be initially self-reinforcing and ultimately self-limiting.  相似文献   

11.
Robert B.  Payne 《Ibis》1969,111(3):300-307
Chestnut Sparrows Passer eminibey near Magadi, Kenya, built no nests of their own but usurped nests newly built by Grey-capped Social Weavers Pseudonigrita arnaudi. The sparrows laid eggs and raised their own young in the appropriated nests. The sparrows were synchronized in their breeding with the social weavers but appeared to have a slightly later peak of breeding. Breeding of the sparrows may be stimulated by the sight of breeding activity of the social weavers. Breeding occurred in May and June at the end of a rainy season.
Male Chestnut Sparrows display at the nests with the wings raised. The display is given for several hours each day. Examination of nests built by the social weavers is an element of courtship display by the male sparrow.
In the subfamily Passerinae there is a greater difference in the form of the courtship display between the Chestnut Sparrow and other species of Passer than between nest-building species of Passer and other genera. The display of Chestnut Sparrows is derived from the nest-advertisement display of nest-building Passer. Its exaggerated form may be an adaptation related to pair formation and intrapair sexual stimulation in the absence of male nest-building behaviour.  相似文献   

12.
H. Shibao 《Insectes Sociaux》1999,46(4):378-386
Summary: The reproductive characteristics of the soldier-producing aphid Pseudoregma bambucicola were studied in Kagoshima, Southern Japan, to know the factors affecting soldier production of eusocial aphids. The soldier proportion in aphid colonies was highest from October to November. In some large colonies, soldiers were observed in all seasons except in July when colony size was relatively small. Multiple regression analysis showed that the colony size was a principal factor affecting soldier proportion throughout a year. Other social or environmental factors such as aphid composition, host plant conditions and predator abundance were not always significant. Rearing experiments revealed that large colonies (̿,000 individuals) produced soldiers in almost all seasons while small colonies (<1,000) never produced any soldiers. The caste-production schedule of adult females was examined in the field. When solitary females produced both castes, they usually produced normal nymphs first and then soldiers. Females from large colonies tended to produce more soldiers in the earlier period of their lifetime, whereas females from newly established small colonies produced no or only a few soldiers at later times. The average number of soldiers and normal nymphs produced consecutively by a single female was >10 and >20, respectively. Because they have a small number of ovarioles (<15 on average), females should alter caste production within the same ovarioles according to changes in environmental conditions. Artificial removal or introduction of predators and reduction of colony size did not affect soldier production over two successive generations, revealing maternal effects on soldier production. Females cannot shift caste production quickly in response to changes in predator abundance and colony size. This is probably due to early developmental determination of castes within the mother's body.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Karel  Weidinger 《Journal of Zoology》1996,239(4):755-768
Eggs of the Cape petrel Daption capense at Nelson Island, South Shetland Islands, Antarctica, exhibited high variability in volume between females (up to 48%), while for each individual female, both volume and shape of eggs were highly correlated over two seasons. Both female size and body-condition at laying were unrelated to egg-volume in the 'good'season 1991, but larger females produced larger eggs in the 'bad'season 1990, when eggs were smaller on average. In 1991, females in better body-condition, but not larger, started laying earlier. In spite of synchronized laying (75% of eggs laid within five days), egg-volume decreased with laying date. Egg-volume differed significantly between the two years, which could not be explained by changes in the breeding population or timing of breeding. The laying of relatively small eggs and low overall breeding success in 1990 most probably reflected changes in food availability. Overall hatchability was 88% and did not differ significantly between disturbed and control colonies in 1991. Larger and more rounded eggs showed better hatching success, but hatchability was related more to egg-volume whereas hatching rate was related more to egg-shape. As the majority of egg losses were attributable to predation, the hatching rate was influenced by parental performance relatively more than by hatchability. Hence the relationship between hatching rate and egg-shape probably reflects improvement in hatching success with female age/experience, whereas the relationship between egg-size and hatchability suggests effect of egg-size independently of parental traits.  相似文献   

15.
G. L. Maclean 《Ostrich》2013,84(3-4):191-218
Maclean, G. L. 1973. The Sociable Weaver, Part 2: Nest architecture and social organization. Ostrich 44:191-218.

Sociable Weavers build nest masses in a number of indigenous tree species (especially on Acacia giraffae branches) and on artificial nest sites like telephone poles. They never build in exotic trees. Nest masses are built of grass straws and roofed over with a superstructure of coarser material such as thorn twigs. The grass substructure contains the nest chambers which do not interconnect. The substructure may be divisible into two or more levels, each forming a social unit comprising the birds inhabiting it.

Each social level of birds is confined to its own structural level at all times, but a bird may roost in any chamber within its own level. The superstructure is not divisible into social units and any bird may build or perch on any part of the superstructure. Movements of birds from one colony to another are rare. The colony at one nest mass leaves the nest at about sunrise in summer, a little later in winter, and flies to the feeding grounds; the birds return to the nest mass for a siesta lasting from about 10:00 hours to 14:00 hours in hot weather, less than this in cool weather. They depart again for their feeding grounds until about sunset.

The internal temperature and RH of the nest chambers were not found to be significantly different from ambient temperature and RH when ambient temperatures were > 21,7°C. At ambient temperatures < 26,7°C the RH of the nest chambers was significantly lower than ambient Rh, but temperatures were not significantly different during the day.  相似文献   

16.
The hypothesis that social stimulation, derived from the presence and activities of conspecifics, can hasten and synchronize breeding in colonies of birds was tested. A modified playback/recorder system was used to continuously exaggerate the amount of colony sound available to zebra finches throughout their courtship period. Males that heard 'sound supplements' generated from their own colony sang more than males in control colonies that did not receive playback; males that heard samples from a different colony, sang at an intermediate level. Females that were exposed to the vocalizations of their mate and playback from a colony other than their own, laid eggs earlier and more synchronously than females in control colonies. Females that heard the vocalizations of their mate along with playback samples generated from their own colony, laid eggs more synchronously but not earlier than control females. Both acoustic treatments caused females to lay larger clutches. Social stimulation influences the breeding schedule and clutch size in zebra finch colonies. If there are advantages associated with these effects, social stimulation may contribute to the maintenance of colonial breeding systems.  相似文献   

17.
Group living often requires maintaining dynamic and varied relationships with fellow group members, while simultaneously monitoring and interacting with external competitors. Group members in many social species vocalize together to produce duets or choruses—coordinated, often conspicuous vocal displays—that may play a role in these interactions. Compared with male–female duets, however, relatively little research exists on the function and adaptive significance of group choruses, which involve three or more individuals. Here we investigate chorusing behavior in the greater ani (Crotophaga major), a communally breeding cuckoo that nests in stable social groups of four to eight unrelated individuals. Groups may remain together for several years on the same nesting territory, and groups occasionally destroy each other's clutches in conflicts over high-quality territories. We asked whether the raucous, highly stereotyped choruses performed by ani groups are primarily used for intra- or intergroup communication, and whether they contain information about the identity of the social group and the number of birds vocalizing. Behavioral observations and acoustic recordings from three breeding seasons revealed that choruses typically occurred during social interactions within the group (78% of choruses) or in response to a predator or extra-group individual (17%) and only rarely in intergroup interactions (4%). Consistent with this finding, choruses did not reliably reflect the number of birds vocalizing, and we found only limited evidence for group-specific acoustic signatures (driven by a single group whose choruses were highly distinct). These results suggest that group choruses play an important role in intra-group signaling, potentially in contexts such as group formation, reinforcement of social bonds within the group, and/or collective decision-making, and they motivate new research questions about the role of collective signaling in social evolution.  相似文献   

18.
Extrapair paternities (EPP) are relatively common in passerines, but rare in seabirds. Like most seabirds, albatrosses are long lived, form long-term pair bonds and require biparental care for chick-rearing. Microsatellite analyses of 327 chicks from black-browed Thalassarche melanophris , grey-headed T. chrysostoma and wandering albatrosses Diomedea exulans over two breeding seasons revealed the presence of EPP in all three species. Though EPP rates varied between species and years, up to 21% of offspring were the result of extrapair matings. Rates were highest in wandering albatrosses (6–21%) followed by grey-headed (3–10%) and black-browed (0–9%) albatrosses. EPP rates were lower in 1998 compared to 1999 in both black-browed and grey-headed albatrosses, whereas the reverse was true for wandering albatrosses. Interspecific differences in EPP rates may reflect differences in breeding phenology and sexual size dimorphism. Differences in timing and frequency of breeding may promote different opportunities for interactions with birds other than their normal partner. The different breeding habitat, dispersion and mate-attraction rituals in wandering albatross, together with the disparity in size between the sexes may also offer more scope for higher rates of EPP. Despite extensive sampling within each colony, we were unable to identify sires for many of the extrapair young; however males from other colonies were involved, raising interesting questions regarding the timing and nature of such events.  相似文献   

19.
MARK BROWN  & MICHAEL J. LAWES 《Ibis》2007,149(2):321-327
Colonial nesters are potentially susceptible to brood parasitism because they present an aggregated source of accessible nests to brood parasites. However, colonial breeding may confer fitness advantages on potential host species that outweigh the costs of parasitism, particularly if colonies are large or dense enough for corporate vigilance to deter parasitism. In addition, some studies have suggested that the spatial habitat structure near host populations is a critical determinant of parasitism rate, with cuckoos targeting those colonies close to cover. We examined the determinants of the likelihood of parasitism by Diderick Cuckoos Chrysococcyx caprius on their main southern African host, the colonially breeding Southern Red Bishop Euplectes orix , from 24 colonies and 1141 nests over two seasons. The likelihood of parasitism by Diderick Cuckoos decreased significantly with increasing colony size and nest density, but not with distance to cover from a colony, providing no support for the spatial habitat structure hypothesis. We suggest that proximate constraints, such as visibility in the semi-closed nest, limit the ability of the host to recognize the Cuckoo egg, giving rise to low rates of rejection of Cuckoo eggs. However, the Cuckoo cannot exploit this apparent weakness when the host breeding population is in large colonies that are protected by corporate vigilance. Consequently, the Diderick Cuckoo – Southern Red Bishop system may represent an evolutionary equilibrium in host and parasite defences.  相似文献   

20.
J. K. Victoria 《Ibis》1972,114(3):367-376
Over a three-year period, 917 eggs from 27 females were collected from a captive colony of African Village Weaverbirds Ploceus c. cucullatus. A study was made of egg-laying and incubation behaviour, clutch characteristics and egg recognition.
Fifteen yearling females laid their first clutches at a mean age of 348 days after hatching. The mean clutch-size was 2.26 in adults and 1.68 in yearlings. The mean clutch replacement interval was 6.6 days in adults and 7.4 days in yearlings with an absolute minimum of 4 days. Eggs were laid at intervals of from 24 to 26 hours beginning usually 2–3 hours after dawn.
The eggs laid by this species vary in ground colour and pattern of spotting between different females, but egg pigmentation is constant for each individual bird. The results of 322 egg-replacement tests showed that an individual female could recognise her own egg type and would eject from the nest eggs differing markedly from her own. The incidence of rejection was proportional the degree of difference between the eggs. The possible implications for parasitism by the Didric Cuckoo Chrysococcyx cuprius are discussed.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号