Despite the accumulation of structural descriptions of bird nests and considerable diversity in these structures across species, we know little about why birds build the nests that they do. Here we used phylogenetic comparative analyses to test one suggested explanation, specifically for Old World babblers (Timaliidae): that building a domed nest coevolved with building a nest on the ground. We show that babblers that build domed nests build them at a lower height than do babblers that build cup-shaped nests, and that in this radiation the evolution of domed nests depended on the transition to building a nest on the ground. Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that babblers add a roof to the nest in order to confer protection agai...
Previous studies have suggested that birds and mammals select materials needed for nest building bas...
Nests are built by a wide variety of animals as functional receptacles for developing eggs and offsp...
Templeton World Charity Foundation and National Geographic Society (M.C.T.-R.: TWCF 0210, EC-58859R-...
This work was supported by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (grant number ...
The architectural diversity of nests in the passerine birds (order Passeriformes) is thought to have...
Nests are essential constructions that directly determine fitness, yet their structure can vary subs...
Successful reproduction for most birds requires them to have built ‘good’ nests. The remarkable dive...
The evolution of nest site use and nest architecture in the non-avian ancestors of birds remains poo...
The pendent nests of some weaverbird and icterid species are among the most complex structures built...
The pendent nests of some weaverbird and icterid species are among the most complex structures built...
Orange-crowned warblers, Leiothlypis celata sordida, breeding on the California Channel Islands exhi...
Nests are built by a wide variety of animals as functional receptacles for developing eggs and offsp...
Determining how animals achieve seemingly complex behaviours is central to our understanding of the ...
All birds construct nests in which to lay eggs and/or raise offspring. Traditionally, it was thought...
Nests, including the enormous structures housing colonies of eusocial insects and the elaborately bu...
Previous studies have suggested that birds and mammals select materials needed for nest building bas...
Nests are built by a wide variety of animals as functional receptacles for developing eggs and offsp...
Templeton World Charity Foundation and National Geographic Society (M.C.T.-R.: TWCF 0210, EC-58859R-...
This work was supported by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (grant number ...
The architectural diversity of nests in the passerine birds (order Passeriformes) is thought to have...
Nests are essential constructions that directly determine fitness, yet their structure can vary subs...
Successful reproduction for most birds requires them to have built ‘good’ nests. The remarkable dive...
The evolution of nest site use and nest architecture in the non-avian ancestors of birds remains poo...
The pendent nests of some weaverbird and icterid species are among the most complex structures built...
The pendent nests of some weaverbird and icterid species are among the most complex structures built...
Orange-crowned warblers, Leiothlypis celata sordida, breeding on the California Channel Islands exhi...
Nests are built by a wide variety of animals as functional receptacles for developing eggs and offsp...
Determining how animals achieve seemingly complex behaviours is central to our understanding of the ...
All birds construct nests in which to lay eggs and/or raise offspring. Traditionally, it was thought...
Nests, including the enormous structures housing colonies of eusocial insects and the elaborately bu...
Previous studies have suggested that birds and mammals select materials needed for nest building bas...
Nests are built by a wide variety of animals as functional receptacles for developing eggs and offsp...
Templeton World Charity Foundation and National Geographic Society (M.C.T.-R.: TWCF 0210, EC-58859R-...