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1 April 2008 Influence of Habitat Variation, Nest-Site Selection, and Parental Behavior on Breeding Success of Ruddy-Capped Nightingale Thrushes (Catharus Frantzii) in Chiapas, Mexico
José Luis Rangel-Salazar, Kathy Martin, Peter Marshall, Robert W. Elner
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Abstract

We examined the influence of ecological and behavioral factors on breeding success of Ruddy-capped Nightingale Thrushes (Catharus frantzii) in contiguous primary- and secondary-forest habitats during the 2000–2003 breeding seasons in the Central Highlands of Chiapas, Mexico. Breeding density was higher in primary, undisturbed forest than in secondary forest with less understory vegetation. Nest-site selection was related to nest-concealment attributes (visibility, canopy cover, and shrub density) at the nest-site and patch levels. Nest-site selection was stronger in secondary forest, which indicates that preferred nest-site attributes were more limited in that habitat. Overall success per breeding attempt varied annually from 20% to 35%, with a higher mean annual success in primary forest (42%) than in secondary forest (19%). Daily nest survival rates were higher in primary than in secondary forest and varied with nest cover, lateral visibility, and density of ground epiphytes. The number of parental visits to nests was higher in primary than in secondary forest and lower for successful than for failed nests during incubation but did not vary with habitat or fate during the nestling stage. Female nest-attentiveness was higher in primary forest than in secondary forest throughout the nesting attempt and was higher for successful nests during the nestling stage only. Thus, Ruddy-capped Nightingale Thrushes showed habitat-specific breeding performance, with the primary-forest habitats (cloud forest, riparian) supporting higher densities and nesting success than secondary, disturbed habitats.

José Luis Rangel-Salazar, Kathy Martin, Peter Marshall, and Robert W. Elner "Influence of Habitat Variation, Nest-Site Selection, and Parental Behavior on Breeding Success of Ruddy-Capped Nightingale Thrushes (Catharus Frantzii) in Chiapas, Mexico," The Auk 125(2), 358-367, (1 April 2008). https://doi.org/10.1525/auk.2008.06233
Received: 23 October 2006; Accepted: 1 July 2007; Published: 1 April 2008
KEYWORDS
breeding density
Catharus frantzii
cloud forest
daily nest survival
habitat-specific reproduction
montane riparian forests
Ruddy-capped Nightingale Thrush
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