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Individuality in nest building: Do Southern Masked weaver ( Ploceus velatus) males vary in their nest-building behaviour?

• Individual males vary in the behaviours used during nest building. • Male behaviour during early nest construction is not repeatable within males. • Male behaviour changes with experience, reducing the frequency of dropping grass. • Avian nest building may be more flexible than is often considered...

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Published in:Behavioural processes 2011-09, Vol.88 (1), p.1-6
Main Authors: Walsh, Patrick T., Hansell, Mike, Borello, Wendy D., Healy, Susan D.
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description • Individual males vary in the behaviours used during nest building. • Male behaviour during early nest construction is not repeatable within males. • Male behaviour changes with experience, reducing the frequency of dropping grass. • Avian nest building may be more flexible than is often considered. We currently have little understanding of how birds know what nest to build and what little we do know has been gained largely from investigations of the completed structures (morphology of finished nests) or of material selection. Here we looked at the behaviours performed by male Southern Masked weaverbirds when building their nests. During the two earliest phases of construction individual males varied in the direction in which they carried and inserted grass into their developing nest, the speed at which they completed phases of nest construction and in the frequency with which they dropped grass during weaving. Behaviours performed during the initial attachment phase, when grass is being secured to a bare branch, were not repeatable within males, whereas during the subsequent “ring” phase behaviours tended to be repeatable. Some males were biased as to which side of the nest they inserted grass blades and strongly lateralized individuals completed phases of nest-building more quickly. The lack of repeatability of most nest-building behaviours and the changes in those behaviours as males build more nests seems most readily explained by increasing dexterity. Further work is required to confirm any role for cognition in these experience-dependent changes.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.beproc.2011.06.011
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source ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Animal ethology
Animals
Aves
Behaviour
Biological and medical sciences
birds
cognition
Functional Laterality
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
grasses
Individuality
Laterality
Male
males
Nest building
Nesting Behavior - physiology
nests
Passeriformes - physiology
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Repeatability
Variation
Vertebrates: general zoology, morphology, phylogeny, systematics, cytogenetics, geographical distribution
Weaverbird
title Individuality in nest building: Do Southern Masked weaver ( Ploceus velatus) males vary in their nest-building behaviour?
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