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Army ant raid attendance and bivouac-checking behavior by neotropical montane forest birds

Published version
Peer-reviewed

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Authors

O'Donnell, S 
Kumar, A 

Abstract

We quantified resident and migrant bird attendance at army ant swarm raids (n = 48) in a neotropical montane forest. All observations were during seasons when Nearctic migrant birds are present. Bird species differed in army ant raid-attending behavior. Resident bird species attended 2 to 54% of raids, while migrants attended at lower maximum frequencies (2 to 21% of raids attended per species). Some resident and migrant bird species attended raids more frequently than expected based on capture rates in mist-net studies and point-count density surveys. Army ant raid attendance may be a regular element of foraging behavior for some resident species, and important in the wintering ecology of some Nearctic migrant species. The bird species that attended raids most frequently were predicted to show behavioral specializations for exploiting army ant swarms. Eight resident bird species (but no migrants) performed a specialized behavior, bivouac checking, by which birds sample army ant activity. Resident bird species' frequencies of raid attendance were positively associated with frequency of checking bivouacs (r = 0.68). We hypothesize the absence of obligate army ant-following birds in montane forests has favored performance of specialized behaviors for exploiting army ant raids by some resident birds. © 2010 by the Wilson Ornithological Society.

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Keywords

3109 Zoology, 3103 Ecology, 31 Biological Sciences, Basic Behavioral and Social Science, Behavioral and Social Science

Journal Title

Wilson Journal of Ornithology

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1559-4491
1938-5447

Volume Title

122

Publisher

BioOne
Sponsorship
This project was supported by a University of Washington ALCOR Fellowship and an OTS Post-Course Award to AK, and University of Washington Royalty Research Fund and NSF grants (IBN-0347315) to SO’D. National Geographic Television also supported the field research. Research was partially supported by the National Science Foundation while SO’D was working at the foundation.