How do individual birds usually space themselves?
Allopreening
Territoriality
What are the different types of territory?
Mating/nesting/feeding
Mating/nesting
Nesting
Pairing/mating
Wintering
What are the different types of territorial behavior?
Singing (Northern mockingbird)
Nest Building
Drumming
Visual Displays (black-backed gull, Capercallie)
Chasing (black-backed gull)
(most visual and auditory)
What are the benfits of territoriality?
Exclusive access to some resource:
food, mates, good nest sites, good places to hide from predators
Territory may have several of these things or just a single resource
Defend an area to provide potential mates with access to resources
What are the costs of territoriality?
Energetically expensive
Can take up a lot of time
Aggressive interactions with intruders can lead to fights and injuries
Can make birds very conspicuous to predators
How do body size and diet play a role in territoriality?
Territories or home ranges of birds increase directly in relation to body size, energy requirements, and selection of food types
Territory size is geared to the food and energy requirements of the bird
What factors make a territory defensible?
Rank and social status: Species and Indvidual Recognition
Social status in Harris’s Sparrow Population
Social Roles in White-throated sparrows
Both sexes include a striking white-striped morph (A) and a duller tan-striped morph (B), which are controlled genetically by an inversion on the second (autosomal) chromosome
Yellow-headed blackbird
Great White Egret displays
Northern White-faced owl
Flocking
Aggregation of conspecifics or several species into groups
Loose temporary aggregations to organized foraging associations of diverse species
Most birds flock outside of the breeding season
Benefits and costs of flock feeding
Pros: Numerous individuals searching for food are more likely to find good food source;
Groups may be more effective at capturing prey
Cons: Producer-scrounger behavior; Exploitation of actively searching birds: Some birds (scroungers) don’t look for new food patches themselves but instead wait for others (producers) to find food and then eat some of it
Benefits and Costs of flock for antipredator
Mobbing
Mixed species flocks
Temperate flocks average 10 to 15 birds of six or seven species
Flock size increases as a result of the addition of new species, not more individual birds of a few species
Flock composition changes regularly
Nuclear species
How do you get an optimal flock size?
Benefits of a communal roost
Coloniality