
Henrik Smith
Professor

Effects of Dispersal Date on Winter Flock Establishment and Social Dominance in Marsh Tits Parus palustris
Author
Summary, in English
(1) We studied the effect of sex, size, age and prior occupancy on social dominance winter flock establishment in a population of marsh tits Parus palustris L. (2) When sex was accounted for, time of establishment in the winter flock-prior occupancy, was critical for the outcome of later aggressive interactions juveniles within flocks. Residents won all interactions with intruders irrespective controlling for sex. (3) Success in, and timing of, establishment were closely linked with hatching lower proportion of late-hatched than early-hatched juveniles became established winter flocks; they also became established later. Even small differences in hatching greatly influenced dominance and the probability of becoming established flock. (4) Since early establishment depends on early hatching, dominance and survival juveniles are determined by how early their parents start breeding. Furthermore, will be strong selection for quick establishment after
Department/s
- Evolutionary ecology
- Biodiversity
- Biodiversity and Conservation Science
- Ecological and Evolutionary Physiology
Publishing year
1988
Language
English
Pages
917-928
Publication/Series
Journal of Animal Ecology
Volume
57
Issue
3
Document type
Journal article
Publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
Topic
- Ecology
- Zoology
Status
Published
Research group
- Biodiversity and Conservation Science
- Life History and Functional Ecology
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 1365-2656