Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Publication

Yellow Warbler (Dendroica Petechia) breeding biology and parasitism by the Shiny Cowbird (Molothrus Bonariensis) in BoquerĂ³n, Puerto Rico

Vicenty, Mayra
Citations
Altmetric:
Abstract
Abstract- Aspects of the breeding biology of the Yellow Warbler (Dendroica petechia) and Shiny Cowbird (Molothrus bonariensis) parasitism were studied in BoquerĂ³n, Puerto Rico from 2001 to 2002. Fifty-seven percent (n = 12) of warbler nests were parasitized. Survival of parasitized nests was lower than non-parasitized nests. Thirty-four percent of nests (n = 21) survived until fledging of cowbird or warbler chicks, with predation the major cause of nest failure (88%). Nineteen nests fledged warbler young and two nests fledged cowbird young, but no nest fledged warbler and cowbird young simultaneously. The Yellow Warbler presented three responses toward parasitism: acceptance and incubation, egg burial, and nest desertion. No warbler young fledged from nests that accepted parasitism. Nests with buried cowbird eggs fledged an average of 2.00 ± 1.41 warbler chicks. This study shows that the Yellow Warbler in Puerto Rico expressed anti-parasite strategies three decades after first contact with the Shiny Cowbird.
Resumen- Se estudiaron aspectos de la biologĂ­a reproductiva del Canario de Mangle (Dendroica petechia) y del parasitismo del Tordo Lustroso (Molothrus bonariensis) en BoquerĂ³n, Puerto Rico, desde 2001 hasta 2002. Cincuenta y siete porciento (n = 12) de los nidos de canario fueron parasitados. La supervivencia de los nidos parasitados fue menor que la de los nidos no parasitados. Treinta y cuatro porciento (n = 21) de los nidos sobreviviĂ³ hasta que volaron pichones de tordo o canario, siendo la depredaciĂ³n la principal causa de pĂ©rdidas de nidos (88%). Juveniles de canario volaron de 19 nidos y juveniles de tordo volaron de dos nidos, pero de ningĂºn nido volaron juveniles de canario y de tordo simultĂ¡neamente. El Canario de Mangle presentĂ³ tres respuestas al parasitismo: aceptaciĂ³n e incubaciĂ³n, enterramiento de huevos y abandono del nido. NingĂºn juvenil de canario volĂ³ de nidos que aceptaron el parasitismo. Los nidos con huevos de tordo enterrados volaron un promedio de 2.00 ± 1.41 juveniles de canario. Este estudio muestra que el Canario de Mangle en Puerto Rico expresĂ³ estrategias antiparĂ¡sitas luego de tres dĂ©cadas del primer contacto con el Tordo Lustroso.
Description
Date
2006
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Keywords
Yellow Warbler (Dendroica petechia), Shiny Cowbird (Molothrus bonariensis), Parasitism, Warbler nests, Parasitized nests, Non-parasitized nests, Breeding biology
Citation
Embedded videos