A prudent hoarder: effects of long-term hoarding in the European nuthatch, Sitta europaea |
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Authors: | Nilsson, Jan.Ake Persson, Hans Kallander Owe |
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Affiliation: | Department of Ecology, Animal Ecology, University of Lund S-223 62 Lund, Sweden |
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Abstract: | Although hoarding has been studied intensively for many decades,few studies have attempted to measure its actual fitness consequences.To fill this gap, we used ptilochronology, the growth of replacementfeathers as a measure of nutritional status, and thus a reflectionof starvation risk, of individual European nuthatches (Sittaeuropaea) during winter. We found that nuthatches are long-termhoarders, retrieving stored food up to at least 98 days afterstoring it. Long-term hoarding enhanced the nutritional statusof individual birds significantly because those individualsexperimentally given an opportunity to store seeds during autumnregrew plucked rectrices faster and larger than did controlbirds. Nuthatches used their stored seeds prudently by adjustingthe amounts they ate to meet their requirements, as determinedby ambient temperatures. Nuthatches refrained from using storedfood during periods of relatively benign conditions so theycould use the food during periods of more severe conditions. |
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Keywords: | European nuthatch, hoarding, nutritional status, ptilchronology, retrieval, Sitta europaea, South Sweden, storing[Behav Ecol 4:369 373(1993)]. |
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