Dr. Matt Reudink

Professor



Faculty of Science

Thompson Rivers University


Urban-nesting mountain chickadees have a reduced response to a simulated predator


Journal article


B. Smith, C. Snell, M. Reudink, K. Otter
Behaviour, 2021

Semantic Scholar DOI
Cite

Cite

APA   Click to copy
Smith, B., Snell, C., Reudink, M., & Otter, K. (2021). Urban-nesting mountain chickadees have a reduced response to a simulated predator. Behaviour.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Smith, B., C. Snell, M. Reudink, and K. Otter. “Urban-Nesting Mountain Chickadees Have a Reduced Response to a Simulated Predator.” Behaviour (2021).


MLA   Click to copy
Smith, B., et al. “Urban-Nesting Mountain Chickadees Have a Reduced Response to a Simulated Predator.” Behaviour, 2021.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{b2021a,
  title = {Urban-nesting mountain chickadees have a reduced response to a simulated predator},
  year = {2021},
  journal = {Behaviour},
  author = {Smith, B. and Snell, C. and Reudink, M. and Otter, K.}
}

Abstract

Anti-predator behaviour is common among birds, but little research exists on whether differences in the predator landscape between urban and rural habitats results in differential anti-predator behaviour. We compared nest-defence behaviour of mountain chickadees (Poecile gambeli) in urban and rural habitats in Kamloops, BC, Canada to a simulated predator model (snake) on top of nest boxes while incubating females were away from nests on foraging bouts. Upon their return, we recorded proximity to the predator model, latency to contact the nest box and enter the nest, and number of gargle and chick-a-dee calls as measures of anti-predator behaviour and compared multivariate “predator aversion scores” across birds occupying either rural or urban landscapes. Rural-nesting birds had more aversive reactions to the predator model than the urban-nesting birds, which may suggest differences in perceived threat of the model, in combination with increased boldness associated with urban-nesting birds.





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