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22 July 2020 Breeding biology of the Mountain Wren-Babbler (Gypsophila crassus)
Morgan C. Slevin, Enroe E. Bin Soudi, Thomas E. Martin
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Abstract

Life history theory in ornithology has been mostly based on temperate birds in part because a relative paucity of biological data has been described for tropical species. Expanding our knowledge about life histories of tropical birds can help us to better understand global trends in life history strategies. To aid in this endeavor, we studied Mountain Wren-Babblers (Gypsophila crassus) breeding in Malaysian Borneo from 2009 to 2017. Relatively small (mean = 28.8 g), dark brown birds, they were cooperative breeders and foraged and cared for the nest in groups of typically 4 or 5 birds. We located 145 nests, which were globular and partially domed (91.8 mm mean opening height accounted for half of 180.7 mm total mean nest height), constructed from fern fronds on the outside and dead leaves on the inside, and most often placed on banks. Brooding attentiveness decreased with nestling age and was rare after day 7 once they began growing their primary feathers. Provisioning rate slightly increased with nestling age. Nestling growth rate constants were typical of many tropical birds, asymptoting a few days prior to fledging. Predation accounted for nearly all nest failures (87 of 88), with a daily nest predation rate for the total nesting period of 0.056 and nest success decreasing with elevation. Daily predation rate was highest during lay (0.117) and lowest during incubation (0.046). We compared these results with related species to identify potential explanations for the trends we described. The most notable result from these comparisons was that Mountain Wren-Babblers have a long incubation period (23.5 d) and adults only incubate for a small part of the day. This anomalous behavior emphasizes the importance of understanding the great variation in tropical life history strategies to ultimately improve life history theory.

Morgan C. Slevin, Enroe E. Bin Soudi, and Thomas E. Martin "Breeding biology of the Mountain Wren-Babbler (Gypsophila crassus)," The Wilson Journal of Ornithology 132(1), 124-133, (22 July 2020). https://doi.org/10.1676/1559-4491-132.1.124
Received: 11 March 2019; Accepted: 11 March 2020; Published: 22 July 2020
KEYWORDS
Borneo
life history
nest survival
nestling growth rate
parental effort
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