Predation and infanticide influence ideal free choice by a parrot occupying heterogeneous tropical habitats
Open Access
- 5 February 2010
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Oecologia
- Vol. 163 (2) , 385-393
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s00442-010-1566-8
Abstract
The ideal free distribution (IFD) predicts that organisms will disperse to sites that maximize their fitness based on availability of resources. Habitat heterogeneity underlies resource variation and influences spatial variation in demography and the distribution of populations. We relate nest site productivity at multiple scales measured over a decade to habitat quality in a box-nesting population of Forpus passerinus (green-rumped parrotlets) in Venezuela to examine critical IFD assumptions. Variation in reproductive success at the local population and neighborhood scales had a much larger influence on productivity (fledglings per nest box per year) than nest site or female identity. Habitat features were reliable cues of nest site quality. Nest sites with less vegetative cover produced greater numbers of fledglings than sites with more cover. However, there was also a competitive cost to nesting in high-quality, low-vegetative cover nest boxes, as these sites experienced the most infanticide events. In the lowland local population, water depth and cover surrounding nest sites were related with F. passerinus productivity. Low vegetative cover and deeper water were associated with lower predation rates, suggesting that predation could be a primary factor driving habitat selection patterns. Parrotlets also demonstrated directional dispersal. Pairs that changed nest sites were more likely to disperse from poor-quality nest sites to high-quality nest sites rather than vice versa, and juveniles were more likely to disperse to, or remain in, the more productive of the two local populations. Parrotlets exhibited three characteristics fundamental to the IFD: habitat heterogeneity within and between local populations, reliable habitat cues to productivity, and active dispersal to sites of higher fitness.Keywords
This publication has 40 references indexed in Scilit:
- MEASURING HABITAT QUALITY: A REVIEWOrnithological Applications, 2007
- Contrasting measures of fitness to classify habitat quality for the black-throated sparrow (Amphispiza bilineata)Biological Conservation, 2006
- The ideal free pike: 50 years of fitness-maximizing dispersal in WindermereProceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 2006
- Rapid temporal change in frequency of infanticide in a passerine bird associated with change in population density and body conditionBehavioral Ecology, 2004
- Toward an ecological synthesis: a case for habitat selectionOecologia, 2003
- Factors Affecting Predation on Artificial Nests in MarshesThe Journal of Wildlife Management, 1997
- Sources and sinks in population biologyTrends in Ecology & Evolution, 1996
- Habitat Selection in BirdsOrnithological Applications, 1987
- Nest Building and Bird BehaviorJournal of Animal Ecology, 1986
- Density as a Misleading Indicator of Habitat QualityThe Journal of Wildlife Management, 1983