Of great tits and fleas: sleep baby sleep


Autoria(s): Christe P.; Richner H.; Oppliger Anne
Data(s)

1996

Resumo

Many bird parasites reduce their hosts' fitness and, as a consequence, anti-parasite behaviour such as preening and nest sanitation has evolved. These activities are time consuming and, during the day, compete directly with time devoted to foraging and food provisioning to nestlings. Moreover, infested hosts may have to allocate extra time to foraging in order to compensate for the energy loss that ectoparasites impose on the nestlings and parents. Alternatively, brooding females could, at the expense of sleeping, allocate more time to preening and nest sanitation at night. If sleeping has a short-term restoring function, one may then expect a reduction in feeding efficiency of sleep-deprived females. In this study, the effect of a haematophagous ectoparasite, the hen flea, on the activity budgets of breeding female great tits during the day and at night was investigated experimentally. Time allocated to nest sanitation increased only slightly from 0.6 % of daytime in ectoparasite-free nests to 2.8% of daytime in infested nests, thus demonstrating the higher priority given to food provisioning than parasite control. Females in infested nests reduced their sleeping time significantly (73.5% of night-time in parasite-free nests versus 48.1% in infested nests). The time freed from the reduction of sleeping time was mainly used for nest sanitation (8.3% of night-time in parasite-free nests versus 27.1% in infested nests). Despite this strong decrease in sleeping time, there was no effect of ectoparasites on the females' rate of food provisioning to nestlings.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_EF53BA319DD2

isbn:0003-3472

isiid:A1996WA30300003

doi:10.1006/anbe.1996.0256

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

Animal Behaviour, vol. 52, no. 6, pp. 1087-1092

Palavras-Chave #BILL MORPHOLOGY; PARUS-MAJOR; ECTOPARASITE; BIRDS
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article