Background: Nest sanitation is a widespread but rarely studied behavior in birds. The most common form of nest sanitation behavior, the removal of nestling feces, has focused the discussion about which selective pressures determine this behavior. The parasitism hypothesis, which states that nestling fecal sacs attract parasites that negatively affect breeding birds, was proposed 40 years ago and is frequently cited as a demonstrated fact. But, to our knowledge, there is no previous experimental test of this hypothesis. Results: We carried out three different experiments to investigate the parasitism hypothesis. First, we used commercial McPhail traps to test for the potential attraction effect of nestling feces alone on flying insects...
[Background] Traditional theory assumes that egg recognition and rejection abilities arise as a resp...
[EN] This article reproduces entirely the chapter V of the dissertation: Behavioural adaptations of ...
We thank Estefanía López for lab work, and Tomás Pérez-Contreras and Emilio Pagani-Núñez for facili...
Background: Nest sanitation is a widespread but rarely studied behavior in birds. The most common fo...
[EN] This article reproduces entirely the chapter IV of the dissertation: Behavioural adaptations of...
Compared to non-flying nest-dwelling ectoparasites, the biology of most species of flying ectoparasi...
Most altricial birds remove their nestlings' feces from the nest, but the evolutionary forces drivin...
Abst ract It has recently been suggested that nest box studies might bias the measurement of behavio...
Birds’ behavioral response to brood parasitism can be influenced not only by evolution but also by c...
Nestling birds are often parasitized while in the nest, and the parasites can have significant negat...
relationship between defecation and feeding in nestling birds: observational and experimental eviden...
Parasitized nestlings might be expected to increase begging effort to obtain additional resources to...
Nest sanitation-related traits have often been explained at the intraspecific level as reducing the ...
Fecal sacs attract insects to the nest and provoke an activation of the immune system of nestling
Abstract Background Nest sanitation behavior is one of the most important means to ensure high repro...
[Background] Traditional theory assumes that egg recognition and rejection abilities arise as a resp...
[EN] This article reproduces entirely the chapter V of the dissertation: Behavioural adaptations of ...
We thank Estefanía López for lab work, and Tomás Pérez-Contreras and Emilio Pagani-Núñez for facili...
Background: Nest sanitation is a widespread but rarely studied behavior in birds. The most common fo...
[EN] This article reproduces entirely the chapter IV of the dissertation: Behavioural adaptations of...
Compared to non-flying nest-dwelling ectoparasites, the biology of most species of flying ectoparasi...
Most altricial birds remove their nestlings' feces from the nest, but the evolutionary forces drivin...
Abst ract It has recently been suggested that nest box studies might bias the measurement of behavio...
Birds’ behavioral response to brood parasitism can be influenced not only by evolution but also by c...
Nestling birds are often parasitized while in the nest, and the parasites can have significant negat...
relationship between defecation and feeding in nestling birds: observational and experimental eviden...
Parasitized nestlings might be expected to increase begging effort to obtain additional resources to...
Nest sanitation-related traits have often been explained at the intraspecific level as reducing the ...
Fecal sacs attract insects to the nest and provoke an activation of the immune system of nestling
Abstract Background Nest sanitation behavior is one of the most important means to ensure high repro...
[Background] Traditional theory assumes that egg recognition and rejection abilities arise as a resp...
[EN] This article reproduces entirely the chapter V of the dissertation: Behavioural adaptations of ...
We thank Estefanía López for lab work, and Tomás Pérez-Contreras and Emilio Pagani-Núñez for facili...