1 / 26

ADVANCED

ADVANCED. LEC 17. University of Rio Grande Donald P. Althoff, Ph.D . ORNITHOLOGY. Reproduction Part II Reference Chapters 12 - 17. Which comes first…the egg or the nest?. Thus far, have covered what the “laid” egg consists of… …but now how we got the egg being ready to be laid

jerold
Télécharger la présentation

ADVANCED

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ADVANCED LEC 17 University of Rio Grande Donald P. Althoff, Ph.D. ORNITHOLOGY Reproduction Part II Reference Chapters 12 - 17

  2. Which comes first…the egg or the nest? • Thus far, have covered what the “laid” egg consists of… • …but now how we got the egg being ready to be laid • For those species that actually prepare a “nest”, they typically do so as the breeding/courtship process. This includes two phases: a) _________________= where b) _________________= what

  3. Nest Site Selection • Many species are very selective. They spend days finding the “spot”. For many species we’ve been able to quantity the apparent factors that result in placement. These include: a) _________________—both at the macro and micro levels (including species & density) b) _________________ c) ___________________________ d) _________________ e) __________—if above ground f) __________ (edge, interior, “scale-dependent”) g) _____________________________ e) etc.

  4. Nest Site Selection…con’t • Some species take little time to select a nest site. For example, some species of waterfowl may do what is referred to as “________ _________”. They simply use someone else’s nest. Ex. Wood ducks, redhead ducks, canvasbacks, ruddy ducks • Many cavity nesters (i.e., _____________________ ) spend “no” time in nest preparation once cavity is identified…that is “excavating the hole” ↑ Wood duck “nest” in wood duck box…with over 25 eggs

  5. Nest Building • Sex that chooses site: may be the Male, may be the Female…may be both. ___________, though, it is the Female. • Some species, like the marsh wren, it is the male that establishes the territory and builds several nests vs. • Some species, like the red-winged blackbird that only establishes the territory and therefore is dictating the general location of nests but not the specific site of the nest.

  6. Nest Building…con’t • Some species: both sexes help build (ex. _________ –the lightning bird) or use old nests (ospreys, hawks) • ____________: male gets the sticks, the female weaves them in. • ____________: female gathers nest material, them male builds the nest

  7. burrowing owl Nest Types • Buried underground • Substrate • Cavity (both primary and secondary) • Elevated ovenbird prothonotary warbler red-eyed vireo

  8. Nests: Buried Underground • Megapods (primitive family of gallinaneous birds) bury their eggs either by covering them in sand or covering them with vegetation • ___________: Nest first lined with “rotting” compost. Then covered with sand. ____ keeps nest temp at 330C (91.40F). Puts head into vegetation, sticks tongue out, and takes temp! --long incubation period --young are precoccial sand decaying veg soil

  9. Substrate Nests: ___ nesting material • Nighthawks, whip-poor-wills (on rock, on “random” leaves) • Tropical birds—lay eggs on ground • Skimmers • Numerous shorebirds

  10. Substrate Nests: Nest material present • “Dry”—ducks gather nesting material by ____________ from eventual nest site—do not gather and/or carry material…and line with feathers (example: pintail) • Some galliforms and swans also do this

  11. Substrate Nests: Nest material present…con’t • ____________—meadowlarks, grasshopper sparrows • Often well-hidden…adult flies close to nest…then ‘walks’ the last few feet to it

  12. Substrate Nests: Nest material present…con’t • Floating nests—grebes, canvasbacks & redheads, ruddy ducks, some terns and loons (semi-floating) western grebe common loon

  13. Cavity Nests • _______ cavities: rough-winged swallows, kingfishers • _______ cavities: a) _________—tree nesting ducks (wood ducks, mergansers, buffleheads) b) _________ = excavated—woodpeckers c) __________ = already excavated— chickadees,nuthatches, wrens, martins, owls

  14. Cavity Nests: Red-cockaded Woodpecker • A species that is a _______________ • Construct their own cavities… usually taking ___________________. • Have ___________ • Key design feature: _________ around cavity causing tree to _______…which discourages snakes

  15. Cavity Nests: Red-cockaded Woodpecker • __________________…so much attention has been given to protecting habitat (80+ year pine stands—mostly longleaf pine) • Have figured out “construction” details…so making some artificial cavities http://www.talltimbers.org/ve-artificial-cavities.html -- video 33+ minutes

  16. Elevated Nests • ___ nesting material a) fairy tern: depression in tree branch b) palm swift: glues eggs to leaves, usually palm leaves (uses saliva)

  17. African palm swift

  18. Elevated Nests…con’t • Nesting material a) __________: mourning doves, herons, cuckoos b) __________: opening at top; globular 4 types: _____________—supported from below _____________—supported from the side _____________—supported from side and rim _____________—supported from top

  19. Elevated Nest: STATANT American robin

  20. Elevated Nest: ADHERENT Barn swallows Elevated Nest: PENSILE Cliff swallows

  21. Elevated Nest: PENDULOUS Weaver finch Baltimore oriole

  22. Elevated Nests… weaver finches • Can tie ______________—and instinctive behavior pattern (see Gill Fig 15-9, p444) • Pendulous nest has these advantages a) “___________” adaptation b) may be “_________” adaptation

  23. Weaver finches: step-by-step construction Egg chamber Roof Ring Entrance Antechamber

  24. Other Nest Types/Forms • Colonial nests: social weaver from African savannah. 5-10 ft wide nests. Each bird with its own nest opening (like an apartment complex) • Community nests: all females lay eggs in same nest. Example: ostriches

  25. Cape cobra at a social weaver nest complex !

  26. Hornbills Nest in tree cavities. After clutch is laid, ________ goes inside. Male then fills in opening with mud, leaving vertical slit opening just wide enough for his/her bill to fit through. She stays insides during _____________________________…he feeds everyone through the slit

More Related