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THE SOCIABLE WEAVER,PART 2: NEST ARCHITECTURE AND SOCIAL ORGANIZATION
Authors:G. L. Maclean
Affiliation:Department of Zoology , University of Natal , P.O. Box 375, Pietermaritzburg, South Africa
Abstract: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.
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