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首页> 外文期刊>Auk >White tail spots and tail-flicking behavior enhance foraging performance in the Hooded Warbler
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White tail spots and tail-flicking behavior enhance foraging performance in the Hooded Warbler

机译:白尾斑和甩尾行为增强了连帽莺的觅食性能

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Many species of insectivorous birds have contrasting plumage patches that are often displayed during foraging. Although such displays are widely hypothesized to flush potential prey and enhance foraging performance, experimental evidence that they function in this way was previously available only from redstarts (Myioborus spp.). I provide additional evidence from an experimental study of the Hooded Warbler (Setophaga citrina) in northwestern Pennsylvania, USA. Hooded Warblers regularly flick their tails while foraging, revealing large white spots on the outer tail feathers. I tested the function of the white tail spots with plumage manipulation experiments. At nests containing 5-day-old nestlings, the attending adults were captured and assigned to one of two treatment groups. For experimental birds, I temporarily darkened the white tail spots with a brown marking pen; for sham-darkened controls, I applied a comparable amount of ink to the dark inner rectrices. Experimental birds with darkened tails showed significantly reduced foraging performance compared with controls, and the decline in foraging performance was driven almost entirely by a decreased frequency of aerial prey attack. High-definition video recording at nests showed that plumage manipulation also altered the types of prey females delivered to nestlings; females with darkened tails delivered significantly fewer winged insects, and proportionally more insect larvae, than controls. However, the types of prey delivered by males were unaffected by plumage manipulation. Tail-flicking behavior codevelops with independent foraging in juveniles and is a significant positive predictor of juvenile foraging performance, even when the effects of juvenile age and activity are controlled statistically. Collectively, these results provide strong support for the hypothesis that white tail spots and tail-flicking behavior of Hooded Warblers function to flush visually oriented winged prey and enhance foraging performance. They also raise questions about sexual dimorphism in the tail pattern and its relationship to possible sex differences in foraging strategies.
机译:许多食虫性鸟类具有对比鲜明的羽毛斑块,通常在觅食期间出现。尽管人们普遍假设这样的显示器可以冲走潜在的猎物并增强觅食性能,但是以前只能从红启动者那里获得这种功能的实验证据(Myioborus spp。)。我提供了来自美国西北宾夕法尼亚州的带帽莺(Setophaga citrina)的实验研究的其他证据。戴兜帽的鸣鸟在觅食时会定期甩尾,在外尾羽上露出大的白色斑点。我通过羽毛操纵实验测试了白尾斑的功能。在包含5天大的雏鸟的鸟巢中,主治成年人被捕获并分配给两个治疗组之一。对于实验鸟类,我用棕色的记号笔暂时将白色的尾巴点变黑。对于假面较暗的控件,我在深色的内部网格中施加了相当数量的墨水。与对照组相比,尾巴变黑的实验鸟的觅食性能显着降低,而觅食性能的下降几乎完全是由空中猎物袭击频率降低所致。巢中的高清视频记录表明,操纵羽毛还改变了交付雏鸟的雌性猎物的类型。与对照组相比,尾巴变黑的雌性有翅昆虫的数量明显减少,成虫幼虫的数量也相应增加。但是,雄性传递的猎物类型不受羽毛操纵的影响。甩尾行为与少年独立觅食共同发展,即使对少年年龄和活动的影响进行统计控制,甩尾行为也是少年觅食性能的重要积极预测指标。总体而言,这些结果为以下假设提供了有力的依据:戴兜帽的莺的白色尾巴斑点和甩尾行为可冲洗视向有翼的猎物并增强觅食性能。他们还提出了有关尾巴模式中的性二态性及其与觅食策略中可能的性别差异的关系的问题。

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