thryothorus leucotis
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The Auk ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 122 (4) ◽  
pp. 1169-1181 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sharon A. Gill ◽  
Bridget J. M. Stutchbury

Abstract In species with long-term partnerships, optimal mate preferences may differ from actual mate choice, and pair displays that advertise individual quality may be expected. We examined the relationship between nest-building and nestling-provisioning effort in Neotropical Buff-breasted Wrens (Thryothorus leucotis) to determine whether male or female expenditure during nest construction was used as an indicator of subsequent parental ability. Buff-breasted Wrens build two nest types: breeding nests used for raising offspring, and “dormitory“ nests built year-round and used by pairs for roosting overnight. The building effort of males was greater than that of their mates for dormitory nests, whereas male and female effort were similar during breeding-nest construction and nestling provisioning. Despite large within-sex variation in building and provisioning efforts, male and female effort within pairs were significantly positively correlated for construction of both nest types and for nestling feeding. Effort expended by males during dormitory-nest construction was positively correlated with nestling-provisioning effort, whereas female building effort was not. No relationship existed between effort in breeding-nest construction and nestling provisioning in either sex. These results suggest that effort in dormitory-nest construction was an indicator of male Buff- breasted Wren parental ability. Females that survived to the year following observation built dormitory nests at a lower rate than those that disappeared, which suggests that nest building may be costly and that by building more than females, males may increase the survival prospects of their partners. Dormitory-nest building by males may play dual roles throughout the year, indicating parental ability and investment in the partnership. La Construcción de Nidos es un Indicador de la Calidad de los Padres en la Especie Neotropical Monógama Thryothorus leucotis


2005 ◽  
Vol 57 (6) ◽  
pp. 557-565 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sharon A. Gill ◽  
Maarten J. Vonhof ◽  
Bridget J. M. Stutchbury ◽  
Eugene S. Morton ◽  
James S. Quinn

The Auk ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 118 (1) ◽  
pp. 191-210 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jorge A. Ahumada

Abstract Buff-breasted (Thryothorus leucotis) and Rufous-and-white (T. rufalbus) wrens living in a dry forest in northeast Colombia (Parque Nacional Natural Tayrona) are faced with a large year-to-year uncertainty in the arrival time of the rainy season, as well as the amount of rain falling in the first six months of the year. Those factors are thought to be important cues used by those species in their reproductive decisions. In this study, I gathered data on several reproductive parameters (clutch size, nesting success, timing of breeding, renesting attempts) for both species during two years of contrasting rainfall patterns. I collected information on the foraging behavior of both species to identify their main food and to study how rainfall affects the dynamics of those resources. Buff-breasted Wrens fed mostly in the understory, gleaning arthropods from upper and lower leaf surfaces, dry branches, and aerial litter. Numbers of arthropods in those microhabitats depend strongly on the amount of rainfall; understory arthropod levels are low during the dry season and increase with the arrival of the rains. Buff-breasted Wrens timed their reproduction with the arrival of the rains in both years, delaying the onset of breeding significantly and continuing to breed during the dry year (1994). Rufous-and-white Wrens spent a large proportion of their time feeding on arthropods in the leaf litter. Number of arthropods in the litter varied little between dry and wet periods. Therefore, Rufous-and-white Wrens had a more constant food environment despite large differences in rainfall within and between the years of the study. That species started breeding earlier in the dry season and extended its breeding longer than Buff-breasted Wrens. My observations suggest that the evolution of the reproductive strategies in those species was mostly through the change of behavioral parameters rather than physiological reproductive parameters such as changes in clutch size, egg size, or number of broods.


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