3 resultados para savi
em Université de Lausanne, Switzerland
Resumo:
Some aspects of torpor have been studied among captive Suncus etruscus by recording the nest temperature. Torpors show a circadian pattern and occur spontaneously or can be induced by food shortage. Body temperature can be controlled during torpor, remaining relatively high at low ambiant temperatures. At 20° C, spontaneous torpors seem to be less deep than induced tropors, but both show similar patterns at 5-8 ° C. Spontaneous torpors begin between 01°° and 06°°, whereas the onset of diet induced torpors seems to depend also on food exhausting. The rates of activity (A) and of torpor (T) show under constant conditions a daily variability. Increase of T is linked with a decrease of A and the relationship could agree with A(%) = Ao( 1-T/100), where Ao is daily rate of activity when T = 0. Occurence of torpor among other Soricidae, possible occurence among free living Suncus etruscus and energy saving are discussed
Resumo:
We investigated how territory quality, settlement date and morphometry affected several components of yearly breeding success of a Swiss population of Savi's Warblers Locustella luscinioides. Territories occupied by males differed from unoccupied sites of similar size and location by having higher and denser reeds, a more extensive straw litter, and a thicker cover of dead sedge leaves. Territories with these characteristics were the ones first chosen by males upon spring arrival. These males, however, did not differ in morphometry from those that arrived later. Availability of suitable nesting sites; rather than food availability, appears to be an important choice criterion for territories. Early arriving males had higher breeding success than late males because of a higher mating success and more successful clutches. The positive correlation between male breeding success and territory quality was thus mediated through their common dependence on occupancy date. Female breeding success decreased with the date of first-clutch laying, mainly because late-nesting females fledged fewer broods. Breeding success in either sex did not correlate with morphometry. Our results provide clear support for territory choice by males, but not for mate or territory choice by females, and show the crucial role played by individual settlement date on many aspects of the breeding cycle of both sexes. We propose a lottery model of mate choice. arriving females obtain the best available territories even without choosing mates or territories; since males occupy territories sequentially and in order of decreasing quality, the few unpaired males available at any moment also occupy the best available territories.