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Waking and Roosting Behaviour of the Indian Myna

 

作者: CounsilmanJ. J.,  

 

期刊: Emu - Austral Ornithology  (Taylor Available online 1974)
卷期: Volume 74, issue 3  

页码: 135-148

 

ISSN:0158-4197

 

年代: 1974

 

DOI:10.1071/MU974135

 

出版商: Taylor&Francis

 

数据来源: Taylor

 

摘要:

SUMMARYCounsilman, J. J. 1974. Waking and roasting behaviour of the Indian Myna, Emu 74; 135–148.Waking and roosting ofAcridotheres tristisat communal roosts were studied during two years in Auckland. Mynas sleep communally in trees all the year, the only exceptions being incubating and brooding females. Birds use some roosts during late spring and summer only and some roosts throughout the year. The temporary roosts are formed just before reproduction and, when they are formed, numbers of birds visiting year-round roosts drop sharply; they are gradually deserted during the summer long before the end of breeding. At year-round roosts the times of assembly and of departure show trends relative to civil twilight and are latest and earliest respectively when breeding is at a peak. The intensities of light at which birds arrive and depart are the lowest at this time. These trends are probably because reproductive hormones affect the birds' sensitivity to physical cues or cause an increased attraction to the territory and nest. Throughout the breeding season changes in the status of arriving birds (singles, pairs and groups) correlate with the changing numbers of breeding pairs.Light is probably the only physical factor that could provideconsistentcues to times of waking and roosting. Other factors, such as temperature and humidity, may have an effect, especially on the periods of assembly and departure. An endogenous clock, set by light and possibly a socialZeitgeber, allows early departures, especially important to breeding individuals; it prevents a waste of time and energy during the day that might come from premature roosting.The time available to breeding birds for feeding and for collecting food for nestlings is increased by leaving early from, and arriving late at, roosts. An early defence of the territory may also advance the time of departure, Vocalizations at roosts do not advertise them but are more proximate socially, as when these calls are given during the day. Gatherings before roosting provide protection from predation, which may be greater in evening, but do not always prevent foraging. Communal steeping protects Mynas more from predators than if they slept solitarily. Other advantages, such as maintaining the unity of juvenile flocks and an increased efficiency in finding food, come from sleeping communally, but at any one time most birds in Auckland do not exploit these additional benefits.

 

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