Cooperative nest defense by European Starlings ( Sturnus vulgaris ) during a predatory threat

Cooperative nest defense has been documented in various passerine species. Parents typically swoop and alarm-call at any predator near their nest, often attracting predominantly male conspecifics to help with nest defense. Potential reasons for males to engage in communal nest defense include direct...

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Main Authors: Elizabeth A Lewis, Colleen A Barber
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2023-09-01
Series:Journal of Field Ornithology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.afonet.org/vol94/iss3/art13
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author Elizabeth A Lewis
Colleen A Barber
author_facet Elizabeth A Lewis
Colleen A Barber
author_sort Elizabeth A Lewis
collection DOAJ
description Cooperative nest defense has been documented in various passerine species. Parents typically swoop and alarm-call at any predator near their nest, often attracting predominantly male conspecifics to help with nest defense. Potential reasons for males to engage in communal nest defense include direct benefits such as deterring a predator from their own nest area, by-product mutualism (paternity uncertainty in nearby nests), reciprocity, kin selection, and quality advertisement. European Starlings ( Sturnus vulgaris ) are a semicolonial and gregarious cavity-nesting passerine with biparental care. They have a mixed reproductive strategy that includes both extra-pair paternity and intraspecific brood parasitism. Therefore, both paternity and maternity uncertainty could occur in conspecific nests. Our objective was to examine whether conspecific nest defense occurred in this species, and if it did, whether both males and females participated. We exposed adult European Starlings breeding in 16 nest boxes to a taxidermy mount of an American red squirrel ( Tamiasciurus hudsonicus; experimental treatment) and a similarly sized and shaped rock (control) mid-way through the nestling period when nestlings were 11 or 12 days old. Significantly more starlings (parents and conspecifics) responded in the experimental than control trials, and they responded with a significantly higher aggregate score of defensive responses, demonstrating both the effectiveness of the taxidermy mount in eliciting defensive responses and the presence of cooperative nest defense in this species. Both males and females participated in mobbing at conspecific nests during the experimental trials. This study is the first to determine that male and female European Starlings engage in cooperative defense of conspecific nests.
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spelling doaj.art-4f4142e3c45141b9b323b6dd19351eb42023-10-12T13:07:59ZengResilience AllianceJournal of Field Ornithology1557-92632023-09-019431310.5751/JFO-00326-940313326Cooperative nest defense by European Starlings ( Sturnus vulgaris ) during a predatory threatElizabeth A Lewis0Colleen A Barber1Department of Biology, Saint Mary's University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, CanadaDepartment of Biology, Saint Mary's University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, CanadaCooperative nest defense has been documented in various passerine species. Parents typically swoop and alarm-call at any predator near their nest, often attracting predominantly male conspecifics to help with nest defense. Potential reasons for males to engage in communal nest defense include direct benefits such as deterring a predator from their own nest area, by-product mutualism (paternity uncertainty in nearby nests), reciprocity, kin selection, and quality advertisement. European Starlings ( Sturnus vulgaris ) are a semicolonial and gregarious cavity-nesting passerine with biparental care. They have a mixed reproductive strategy that includes both extra-pair paternity and intraspecific brood parasitism. Therefore, both paternity and maternity uncertainty could occur in conspecific nests. Our objective was to examine whether conspecific nest defense occurred in this species, and if it did, whether both males and females participated. We exposed adult European Starlings breeding in 16 nest boxes to a taxidermy mount of an American red squirrel ( Tamiasciurus hudsonicus; experimental treatment) and a similarly sized and shaped rock (control) mid-way through the nestling period when nestlings were 11 or 12 days old. Significantly more starlings (parents and conspecifics) responded in the experimental than control trials, and they responded with a significantly higher aggregate score of defensive responses, demonstrating both the effectiveness of the taxidermy mount in eliciting defensive responses and the presence of cooperative nest defense in this species. Both males and females participated in mobbing at conspecific nests during the experimental trials. This study is the first to determine that male and female European Starlings engage in cooperative defense of conspecific nests.https://journal.afonet.org/vol94/iss3/art13communal nest defenseconspecific nest defensecooperative neighborhoodseuropean starlingmobbing
spellingShingle Elizabeth A Lewis
Colleen A Barber
Cooperative nest defense by European Starlings ( Sturnus vulgaris ) during a predatory threat
Journal of Field Ornithology
communal nest defense
conspecific nest defense
cooperative neighborhoods
european starling
mobbing
title Cooperative nest defense by European Starlings ( Sturnus vulgaris ) during a predatory threat
title_full Cooperative nest defense by European Starlings ( Sturnus vulgaris ) during a predatory threat
title_fullStr Cooperative nest defense by European Starlings ( Sturnus vulgaris ) during a predatory threat
title_full_unstemmed Cooperative nest defense by European Starlings ( Sturnus vulgaris ) during a predatory threat
title_short Cooperative nest defense by European Starlings ( Sturnus vulgaris ) during a predatory threat
title_sort cooperative nest defense by european starlings sturnus vulgaris during a predatory threat
topic communal nest defense
conspecific nest defense
cooperative neighborhoods
european starling
mobbing
url https://journal.afonet.org/vol94/iss3/art13
work_keys_str_mv AT elizabethalewis cooperativenestdefensebyeuropeanstarlingssturnusvulgarisduringapredatorythreat
AT colleenabarber cooperativenestdefensebyeuropeanstarlingssturnusvulgarisduringapredatorythreat