Responses to terrestrial nest predators by endemic and introduced Hawaiian birds
Abstract Birds free from nest predators for long periods may either lose the ability to recognize and respond to predators or retain antipredator responses if they are not too costly. How these alternate scenarios play out has rarely been investigated in an avian community whose members have differe...
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Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6021 |
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doaj-574c4cd113a5489ea6278ad7a009170d2021-03-02T06:58:32ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582020-02-011041949195810.1002/ece3.6021Responses to terrestrial nest predators by endemic and introduced Hawaiian birdsGeorge C. Cummins0Tad C. Theimer1Eben H. Paxton2Department of Biological Sciences Northern Arizona University Flagstaff AZ USADepartment of Biological Sciences Northern Arizona University Flagstaff AZ USAPacific Island Ecosystems Research Center U.S. Geological Survey Hawaii National Park HI USAAbstract Birds free from nest predators for long periods may either lose the ability to recognize and respond to predators or retain antipredator responses if they are not too costly. How these alternate scenarios play out has rarely been investigated in an avian community whose members have different evolutionary histories. We presented models of two nest predators (rat and snake) and a negative control (tree branch) to birds on Hawaiʻi Island. Endemic Hawaiian birds evolved in the absence of terrestrial predators until rats were introduced approximately 1,000 years ago. Introduced birds evolved with diverse predator communities including mammals and snakes, but since their introduction onto the island approximately one century ago have been free from snake predation. We found that (a) endemic and introduced birds had higher agitation scores toward the rat model compared with the branch, and (b) none of the endemic birds reacted to the snake model, while one introduced bird, the Red‐billed Leiothrix (Leiothrix lutea), reacted as strongly to the snake as to the rat. Overall, endemic and introduced birds differ in their response to predators, but some endemic birds have the capacity to recognize and respond to introduced rats, and one introduced bird species retained recognition of snake predators from which they had been free for nearly a century, while another apparently lost that ability. Our results indicate that the retention or loss of predator recognition by introduced and endemic island birds is variable, shaped by each species' unique history, ecology, and the potential interplay of genetic drift, and that endemic Hawaiian birds could be especially vulnerable to introduced snake predators.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6021introduced speciesmultipredator hypothesisnest predationnovel predatorpredator response |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
George C. Cummins Tad C. Theimer Eben H. Paxton |
spellingShingle |
George C. Cummins Tad C. Theimer Eben H. Paxton Responses to terrestrial nest predators by endemic and introduced Hawaiian birds Ecology and Evolution introduced species multipredator hypothesis nest predation novel predator predator response |
author_facet |
George C. Cummins Tad C. Theimer Eben H. Paxton |
author_sort |
George C. Cummins |
title |
Responses to terrestrial nest predators by endemic and introduced Hawaiian birds |
title_short |
Responses to terrestrial nest predators by endemic and introduced Hawaiian birds |
title_full |
Responses to terrestrial nest predators by endemic and introduced Hawaiian birds |
title_fullStr |
Responses to terrestrial nest predators by endemic and introduced Hawaiian birds |
title_full_unstemmed |
Responses to terrestrial nest predators by endemic and introduced Hawaiian birds |
title_sort |
responses to terrestrial nest predators by endemic and introduced hawaiian birds |
publisher |
Wiley |
series |
Ecology and Evolution |
issn |
2045-7758 |
publishDate |
2020-02-01 |
description |
Abstract Birds free from nest predators for long periods may either lose the ability to recognize and respond to predators or retain antipredator responses if they are not too costly. How these alternate scenarios play out has rarely been investigated in an avian community whose members have different evolutionary histories. We presented models of two nest predators (rat and snake) and a negative control (tree branch) to birds on Hawaiʻi Island. Endemic Hawaiian birds evolved in the absence of terrestrial predators until rats were introduced approximately 1,000 years ago. Introduced birds evolved with diverse predator communities including mammals and snakes, but since their introduction onto the island approximately one century ago have been free from snake predation. We found that (a) endemic and introduced birds had higher agitation scores toward the rat model compared with the branch, and (b) none of the endemic birds reacted to the snake model, while one introduced bird, the Red‐billed Leiothrix (Leiothrix lutea), reacted as strongly to the snake as to the rat. Overall, endemic and introduced birds differ in their response to predators, but some endemic birds have the capacity to recognize and respond to introduced rats, and one introduced bird species retained recognition of snake predators from which they had been free for nearly a century, while another apparently lost that ability. Our results indicate that the retention or loss of predator recognition by introduced and endemic island birds is variable, shaped by each species' unique history, ecology, and the potential interplay of genetic drift, and that endemic Hawaiian birds could be especially vulnerable to introduced snake predators. |
topic |
introduced species multipredator hypothesis nest predation novel predator predator response |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6021 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT georgeccummins responsestoterrestrialnestpredatorsbyendemicandintroducedhawaiianbirds AT tadctheimer responsestoterrestrialnestpredatorsbyendemicandintroducedhawaiianbirds AT ebenhpaxton responsestoterrestrialnestpredatorsbyendemicandintroducedhawaiianbirds |
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