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Experiments with artificial nests on predation in reed habitats
Authors:  ter Batá  ry, Hans Winkler  Andrá  s Bá  ldi
Affiliation:(1) Hungarian Natural History Museum, Ludovika Square 2, 1083 Budapest, Hungary;(2) Konrad Lorenz Institut für Vergleichende Verhaltensforschung, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Savoyenstrasse 1A, 1160 Vienna, Austria;(3) Animal Ecology Research Group, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Hungarian Natural History Museum, Ludovika Square 2, 1083 Budapest, Hungary
Abstract:We performed nest predation experiments with artificial nests in reedbeds investigating whether nest predation pressure is different at the water-reed edge and the grassland-reed edge compared with the reed interior. Furthermore, we tested the effects of vegetation structure (reed density, height and thickness) and the effect of other nest site characteristics (distance from edge, water depth) on the success of artificial nests. The experiments were completed 3 times during the breeding season in 2001 at Lake Neusiedl, Austria. Each artificial nest resembled Great Reed Warbler (Acrocephalus arundinaceus) nests and contained one plasticine and one Quail (Coturnix coturnix) egg and the predators were identified by marks left on the eggs. The potential predators were birds, probably the Marsh Harrier (Circus aeruginosus), gulls (Larus spp.) and reed warblers (Acrocephalus spp.). Nest survival data were analysed using the Mayfield method, and we performed a discriminant analysis for the data of vegetation and nest site characteristics. The nest predation was higher at the edges than in the reed interior, and was most pronounced in April, before the new reed sprouted. The reason for this finding was probably that after May the new reed contributed to greater concealment of the nests through the higher reed density and height.
Keywords:Concealment  Edge effect  Mayfield method  Nest site  Vegetation structure
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