Maladaptive habitat selection of a migratory passerine bird in a human-modified landscape.

In human-altered environments, organisms may preferentially settle in poor-quality habitats where fitness returns are lower relative to available higher-quality habitats. Such ecological trapping is due to a mismatch between the cues used during habitat selection and the habitat quality. Maladaptive...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Franck A Hollander, Hans Van Dyck, Gilles San Martin, Nicolas Titeux
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2011-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3184164?pdf=render
id doaj-385bde2062e34befa5fa68c86cd0003a
record_format Article
spelling doaj-385bde2062e34befa5fa68c86cd0003a2020-11-25T00:02:20ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032011-01-0169e2570310.1371/journal.pone.0025703Maladaptive habitat selection of a migratory passerine bird in a human-modified landscape.Franck A HollanderHans Van DyckGilles San MartinNicolas TiteuxIn human-altered environments, organisms may preferentially settle in poor-quality habitats where fitness returns are lower relative to available higher-quality habitats. Such ecological trapping is due to a mismatch between the cues used during habitat selection and the habitat quality. Maladaptive settlement decisions may occur when organisms are time-constrained and have to rapidly evaluate habitat quality based on incomplete knowledge of the resources and conditions that will be available later in the season. During a three-year study, we examined settlement decision-making in the long-distance migratory, open-habitat bird, the Red-backed shrike (Lanius collurio), as a response to recent land-use changes. In Northwest Europe, the shrikes typically breed in open areas under a management regime of extensive farming. In recent decades, Spruce forests have been increasingly managed with large-size cutblocks in even-aged plantations, thereby producing early-successional vegetation areas that are also colonised by the species. Farmland and open areas in forests create mosaics of two different types of habitats that are now occupied by the shrikes. We examined redundant measures of habitat preference (order of settlement after migration and distribution of dominant individuals) and several reproductive performance parameters in both habitat types to investigate whether habitat preference is in line with habitat quality. Territorial males exhibited a clear preference for the recently created open areas in forests with higher-quality males settling in this habitat type earlier. Reproductive performance was, however, higher in farmland, with higher nest success, offspring quantity, and quality compared to open areas in forests. The results showed strong among-year consistency and we can therefore exclude a transient situation. This study demonstrates a case of maladaptive habitat selection in a farmland bird expanding its breeding range to human-created open habitats in plantations. We discuss the reasons that could explain this decision-making and the possible consequences for the population dynamics and persistence.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3184164?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Franck A Hollander
Hans Van Dyck
Gilles San Martin
Nicolas Titeux
spellingShingle Franck A Hollander
Hans Van Dyck
Gilles San Martin
Nicolas Titeux
Maladaptive habitat selection of a migratory passerine bird in a human-modified landscape.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Franck A Hollander
Hans Van Dyck
Gilles San Martin
Nicolas Titeux
author_sort Franck A Hollander
title Maladaptive habitat selection of a migratory passerine bird in a human-modified landscape.
title_short Maladaptive habitat selection of a migratory passerine bird in a human-modified landscape.
title_full Maladaptive habitat selection of a migratory passerine bird in a human-modified landscape.
title_fullStr Maladaptive habitat selection of a migratory passerine bird in a human-modified landscape.
title_full_unstemmed Maladaptive habitat selection of a migratory passerine bird in a human-modified landscape.
title_sort maladaptive habitat selection of a migratory passerine bird in a human-modified landscape.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2011-01-01
description In human-altered environments, organisms may preferentially settle in poor-quality habitats where fitness returns are lower relative to available higher-quality habitats. Such ecological trapping is due to a mismatch between the cues used during habitat selection and the habitat quality. Maladaptive settlement decisions may occur when organisms are time-constrained and have to rapidly evaluate habitat quality based on incomplete knowledge of the resources and conditions that will be available later in the season. During a three-year study, we examined settlement decision-making in the long-distance migratory, open-habitat bird, the Red-backed shrike (Lanius collurio), as a response to recent land-use changes. In Northwest Europe, the shrikes typically breed in open areas under a management regime of extensive farming. In recent decades, Spruce forests have been increasingly managed with large-size cutblocks in even-aged plantations, thereby producing early-successional vegetation areas that are also colonised by the species. Farmland and open areas in forests create mosaics of two different types of habitats that are now occupied by the shrikes. We examined redundant measures of habitat preference (order of settlement after migration and distribution of dominant individuals) and several reproductive performance parameters in both habitat types to investigate whether habitat preference is in line with habitat quality. Territorial males exhibited a clear preference for the recently created open areas in forests with higher-quality males settling in this habitat type earlier. Reproductive performance was, however, higher in farmland, with higher nest success, offspring quantity, and quality compared to open areas in forests. The results showed strong among-year consistency and we can therefore exclude a transient situation. This study demonstrates a case of maladaptive habitat selection in a farmland bird expanding its breeding range to human-created open habitats in plantations. We discuss the reasons that could explain this decision-making and the possible consequences for the population dynamics and persistence.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3184164?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT franckahollander maladaptivehabitatselectionofamigratorypasserinebirdinahumanmodifiedlandscape
AT hansvandyck maladaptivehabitatselectionofamigratorypasserinebirdinahumanmodifiedlandscape
AT gillessanmartin maladaptivehabitatselectionofamigratorypasserinebirdinahumanmodifiedlandscape
AT nicolastiteux maladaptivehabitatselectionofamigratorypasserinebirdinahumanmodifiedlandscape
_version_ 1725438316688441344