Our recent paper on interspecific social information use in wood warblers (Phylloscopus sibilatrix) is now available online!

In a field experiment, we found that wood warblers use social cues from earlier-arriving migrant heterospecifics when deciding where to settle. In one of earlier studies, we also showed that wood warblers use conspecific social cues for settlement decisions. Together, the results of these two experiments suggest that con- and heterospecific attraction as strategies for habitat selection may coexist within a population, which likely results because the latter strategy complements using conspecific cues in the wild.

Importantly, we found that heterospecific attraction is not a phenomenon limited to resident-migrant interactions, but may involve also an information flow from early-arriving migrants to late-arriving species. This suggests that heterospecific attraction as a habitat selection strategy may operate under broader contexts than originally suggested.

In a broader context, results of our studies on the use of con- and heterospecific social cues for settlement decisions in wood warblers suggest an interplay of attraction and avoidance mechanisms, depending on the type of a cue being used. This highlights the importance of both positive and negative effects of social environment on settlement behavior of individuals.

The paper is available here: https://doi.org/10.1093/beheco/arx029

 

The wood warbler. Photo by Steve Garvie (CC BY-SA 2.0)

##JSz

In January, a new member has joined our team: Jarek Raubic. Welcome on board!

 

## LK

Natalia Królikowska is one of the two PhD students awarded the Polish-American Freedom Foundation “PhDo” scholarship!

Here you can find more information about the scholarship program and for more information about the research conducted by Natalia please visit this site.

 

##JSz

We are happy to inform, that recent paper authored by Jakub Szymkowiak, Lechosław Kuczyński (both from Population Ecology Lab), and Robert L. Thomson (FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology, University of Cape Town, South Africa & Department of Biology, University of Turku, Finland) will be published in the November issue of Oikos journal as Editor’s Choice!

The study shows that wood warblers (Phylloscopus sibilatrix) selectively use intraspecific social information for breeding-site selection, by copying settlement decisions of poor quality conspecifics, but avoid settling near good quality individuals, likely because of their high competitive abilities. The observed decision-making pattern supports the predicted, yet not experimentally tested, negative effect of intraspecific competition on benefit of social information. The study highlights also that the use of social cues in settlement decisions may be both positively and negatively biased.

You can find the paper here: http://doi.org/10.1111/oik.03052

 

##JSz

sibilatrix

The wood warbler. Photo by Veljo Runnel (CC BY-NC 2.0 license)

On 1st September 2016, Population Ecology Lab has been launched!

Stay tuned for updates from our Lab!

 

Pop Ecol Lab Team