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  4. Age, brood fate, and territory quality affect nest-site fidelity in white stork Ciconia ciconia
 
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Age, brood fate, and territory quality affect nest-site fidelity in white stork Ciconia ciconia

Type
Journal article
Language
English
Date issued
2023
Author
Białas, Joanna 
Siekiera, Joachim
Siekiera, Artur
Chromik, Wiesław
Dylewski, Łukasz 
Tobółka, Marcin 
Faculty
Wydział Medycyny Weterynaryjnej i Nauk o Zwierzętach
Journal
Frontiers in Zoology
ISSN
1742-9994
DOI
10.1186/s12983-023-00506-y
Web address
https://frontiersinzoology.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12983-023-00506-y
Volume
20
Pages from-to
art. 33
Abstract (EN)
Background
A particular type of site fidelity is faithfulness to the nest site, where birds are not only reoccupying breeding territories but also reusing nests built in previous breeding seasons. Staying faithful to the nest site is believed to be an adaptive strategy, and based on the ability to predict an individual's own breeding success, a hypothesis of “win-stay:loose-switch” was proposed. In this study, we aimed to resolve which factors affect the nest-site fidelity of white stork Ciconia ciconia, species known for reusing nests available in the breeding sites. Basing on ring recoveries from 31 years of studies in Western and Southern Poland, we analysed the impact of intrinsic and extrinsic factors on nest-site fidelity.
Results
We found that increasing age and breeding success (i.e. producing any fledglings or not) increased the probability of reusing the nest, but in the oldest individuals, the probability decreased. In turn, the probability of breeding success increased with age, the increasing number of reproductive events on the particular nest, and the presence on the nest in the previous year. However, the oldest individuals had lower probability of success, as the relationship was curvilinear. The number of fledglings, however, was influenced only by an individual's age. The number of reproductive events on the nest was, in turn, affected by age, with the youngest and oldest individuals using the current nest for the least number of years.
Conclusions
Our study shows that the decision process of whether to stay faithful to the nest or switch is based on the experience from the previous breeding event, consistently with the “win-stay:loose-switch” hypothesis. Our results also show that site fidelity benefits white storks, as the probability of breeding success increases if the nest is reused. Results also show the senescence effect that lowers breeding success and site fidelity probabilities.
Keywords (EN)
  • site fidelity

  • nest fidelity

  • nest switching

  • breeding dispersal

  • ring resighting

License
cc-bycc-by CC-BY - Attribution
Open access date
September 21, 2023
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